orange
I disagree - calcium burns Red
I disagree with you're answer^ whoever said red... while it is true that calcium burns red, we are talking about a binary compound, not a single element. calcium chloride burns orange.
You are being too general. Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core. Just saying orange is not enough.
Just tried it in my lab - the main color is Red -sorry
It depends on the purity of the salt and the amount of organic particles present.
Flame tests produce the same results on solids as they do on solutions. This is another way that we can identify precipitates. Calcium carbonate burns a yellow-red because the ion calcium burns this colour.
Green
Red
It is not the anions (e.g. iodide) that are responsible for the flame test color, rather the cations such as sodium ion, potassium ion and calcium ion give you different colors.
The colour of any sample containing copper ions burns with a bluish green flame in the flame test.
A pink color from the spectral lines of lithium.
Iron is a sort of sparkly-black when it is burned.
calcium chloride burns with a orange flame.
NaCl burns yellow in a flame test.
Red
Red.
bright orange
Orange-peach color
The flame test for strontium - a strong red color.
Bright yellow :: This is the sodium ions. Any sodium compound will give a flame test colour of yellow/
Orangish yellow
It is not the anions (e.g. iodide) that are responsible for the flame test color, rather the cations such as sodium ion, potassium ion and calcium ion give you different colors.
The colour of any sample containing copper ions burns with a bluish green flame in the flame test.
A pink color from the spectral lines of lithium.