Capable of igniting and burning is a combustible gas.
Any compressed gas meeting the requirements for lower flammability limit, flammability limit range, flame projection,etc.
All flammable substances are surely combustible, but all combustible substances are not essentially flammable.
Both flammable and combustible mean apt to burn.
It's very flammable - a spark can cause an gas explosion.
For a gas or vapor to be flammable or an explosion hazard it must have a concentration in air between the Lower Explosive Limit (LEL) and the Upper Explosive Limit (UEL) for that particular gas or vapor.
What is the difference between ammonia gas and an ammonium ion?
gas
Flammable gas will burn. Toxic gas is poisonous. A gas can be toxic, but not flammable, flammable but not toxic, both, or neither.
Both flammable and combustible mean apt to burn.
hazardous are is where any flammable like Gas .
Helium is the lighter gas but hydrogen is very flammable
hazardous
hazardous
A flammable gas is in Division 2.1 in the widely used classification of hazardous materials recommended by the UN Committee of Experts and adopted by the US Department of Transportation, among other nations.
Propane is C3H8 and natural gas is (mostly) methane, which is CH4. They are similar in that they are both saturated hydrocarbons that are extremely flammable and commonly used as fuels, but they are two different molecules.
The simplest colourless, flammable gas beginning with 'e', is 'ethane'.
Yes. Natural gas is composed of mostly of methane (which is flammable), as well as lesser amounts of other flammable hydrocarbons. ** Actually, natural gas is not flammable on it's own and must mix with air to be flammable.
Nitrogen gas is not in itself flammable, and does not have an auto ignition temperature.
It's very flammable - a spark can cause an gas explosion.