The triangle seen in combustion reactions on top of the arrow separating the reactants from the products is the Greek letter delta which means heat is added.
the organic (or certain inorganic) compounds oxygen (generally excess) heat
There is what is known as a "fire/combustion" triangle, which has the three components necessary for fire: oxygen, fuel, heat
differentiate rapid combustion to spontaneous combustion
You're looking at a fire triangle. Fire refers to an ignition source, a spark, or similar which will cause the combustion reaction to begin. Fuel refers to the object which will be burned in the reaction. Oxygen is, exactly what it says, Oxygen. Which is required for combustion reactions.
Combustion reactions
A combustion reaction involves the three reactants from the fire triangle, heat, oxygen, and fuel.
Oxygen, heat and fuel :)
The term "fire triangle", or combustion triangle, refers to the inherent principles in the methodology of making a fire. The "fire triangle" is a model for understanding the resources and methods needed to make a fire.
no because it needs fuel and hydrogen does not have everything in the combustion triangle
the organic (or certain inorganic) compounds oxygen (generally excess) heat
The triangle seen in combustion reactions on top of the arrow separating the reactants from the products is the Greek letter delta which means heat is added.
No phosphorus is not necessary for fire to take place.The fire triangle or combustion triangle is a simple model for understanding the ingredients necessary for most fires.The triangle illustrates a fire requires three elements: heat, fuel and an oxidizing agent(usually oxygen).
There is what is known as a "fire/combustion" triangle, which has the three components necessary for fire: oxygen, fuel, heat
differentiate rapid combustion to spontaneous combustion
You're looking at a fire triangle. Fire refers to an ignition source, a spark, or similar which will cause the combustion reaction to begin. Fuel refers to the object which will be burned in the reaction. Oxygen is, exactly what it says, Oxygen. Which is required for combustion reactions.
in internal combustion engine combustion happens internally in cylinder and in external combustion engine combustion happens externally in boiler
in internal combustion engine combustion happens internally in cylinder and in external combustion engine combustion happens externally in boiler