The hotter a hydrocarbon gas burns, the bluer the flame. An orange flame indicates a cool flame with incomplete combustion since soot (unburnt carbon) glows orange. Hydrogen gas burns so completely and so hot that it emits light in the ultraviolet. You cannot see a hydrogen gas flame. Alcohol fires, similarly, tend to burn very efficiently and are nearly invisible--as anybody who watches NASCAR races knows.
complete burning gas completely burns its fuel and a incomplete burning gas partially burns.
Acetylene, at 3480C, is the gas that burns hottest in oxygen. Hydrogen is second at 3200C.
C02
No, hydrogen usually burns colorless. It is possible to see a slight blue tinge sometimes.
calcium burns red sodium burns orange
calcium burns red sodium burns orange
The hotter a hydrocarbon gas burns, the bluer the flame. An orange flame indicates a cool flame with incomplete combustion since soot (unburnt carbon) glows orange. Hydrogen gas burns so completely and so hot that it emits light in the ultraviolet. You cannot see a hydrogen gas flame. Alcohol fires, similarly, tend to burn very efficiently and are nearly invisible--as anybody who watches NASCAR races knows.
The gas which burns with a pop sound is hydrogen gas.
which gas burns at a very high temperature
I believe it burns orange.
barium chloride
complete burning gas completely burns its fuel and a incomplete burning gas partially burns.
it is the hydrogen that burns to make gas hot
yes, hydrogen gas burns with a pop!
No, propane burns at 2500btu while natural gas burns at only 1012btu. Propane burns over 2 times hotter than natural gas.
pigment