Yes, carbon fiber is indeed flammable and does burn. Carbon fiber is slightly expensive but it known to be very strong and durable.
Yes, it is combustible.
Anything that can burn is a combustible substance.
Cobustible substances can catch on fire but non-combustible substances are inflammabe
FR textiles can be divided into non-flame fiber, flame retardant fiber, combustible fiber and burn easily fibers. non-flame fiber( fire cannot lit)-- LOI value was over 35, glass fiber, metal fiber, asbestos fiber, carbon fiber: flame retardant fiber(fire can lit it, but will be extinguished without fire) --LOI value was over 35, chloro fiber, aramid fiber, modacrylic fiber.: combustible fiber(fire can lit it, continued fire without fire)-- LOI value was over 20, polyester, nylon, silk, wool; burn easily fibers(burns rapidly, burns up without fire) -- LOI value was under 20, cotton, linen, viscose, acrylic, etc. Limited oxygen index LOI: under the stated experimental conditions, the material can be maintained the combustion state needed the oxygen minimum concentration of oxygen-nitrogen mixture gas. Testing method: placed a certain size sample on the sample holder, adjusting the ratio of oxygen and nitrogen, igniting the sample with a specific igniter, makes the sample self-extinguishing after burning the certain time(2 minutes), or certain damage length (40mm), under this condition, according to the oxygen /nitrogen flow to calculated the LOI.
Yes, carbon fiber is indeed flammable and does burn. Carbon fiber is slightly expensive but it known to be very strong and durable.
Yes, it is combustible.
coke is combustible
Americium is not combustible.
Yes, it is combustible.
stucco is non-combustible
Any element is combustible we will find Uranium oxide on the earth. i.e uranium is combustible
No, plasma is not combustible. Plasma is not something that can be combustible without additional chemicals, as it is relatively cool.
Combustible: # Food # Fat
Neptunium is not combustible but pyrophoric as a powder.
Some houses are combustible, such as wooden structures. Even in brick buildings the contents may be combustible.
Yes, C6H10 a.k.a. hexane is combustible.