yes
There are two answers:
1.) Flame retardant chemicals that stop ignition by Endothermic degradation
Dilution of fuel
Thermal shielding
Dilution of gas phase
Gas phase radical quenching
2.) In theory, anything will burn on Earth at sea level if the requried heat is applied long enough to the material. But...there are certain materials like cermaic and silicone (because they are used to make the space shuttle) that are hypothetically "un-burnable" but they will burn at some temperature but we just never tested it or do no have the technology to do it.
i think its called ceramic....try looking it up
When you "burn" something you simply combine it with oxygen, you oxidise it. Rapid buring of a metal can be achieved in the presence of heat and Oxygen to produce an oxide of the metal.
Because - being metal - it conducts heat away from the burn area.
The metal will melt if you do that.
Steel is melted or vaporized, not burned.
it expands from the heat and it gets bigger. Don't burn yourself!
Depends on the metal no metal does not burn it melts if u see a picture of metal burning it is impurities in the metal but after it melts i dont know what happens next
Metal is not elude. It will take a while for metal to burn.
Metals cannot 'burn'. Most likely, your 'burning' metal is enriched with other elements that burn. It can melt, it then just melts into liquid metal, then it is still metal.
When you "burn" something you simply combine it with oxygen, you oxidise it. Rapid buring of a metal can be achieved in the presence of heat and Oxygen to produce an oxide of the metal.
no you can not
To burn iron, the temperature needs to be more than 1200 degrees Celsius. The metal must be white hot and surrounded by pure oxygen to burn up.
No. A metal oxide can be thought of as the product of burning a metal. In essence it has already burned.
you will burn and burn and it will hurt alot
Yes metal spike for durability and stamina
After the heat source exceeds the melting point of the metal, by nature the metal will melt.
No. Metals do not burn, only melt.
2nd degree burn