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The silent flame on the Bunsen burner is the yellow/orange flame.
A Bunsen burner is a flame that makes a devise that combines flammable gas with air, named after Robert Bunsen, the German chemist who invented an improved Bunsen burner in 1855. A Bunsen burner is used in laboratories.
It is used for adjusting the flame
It is used for adjusting the flame
A Bunsen burner flame is hottest when the air valve hole is open.
To change the flame on a Bunsen burner you need only to open or close the air valve to change the combustion reaction.
a Bunsen burner flame can be 20* to 2000*
The silent flame on the Bunsen burner is the yellow/orange flame.
To change the flame of a Bunsen burner you must open or close the air valve, usually this is done by rotating the barrel.
A Bunsen burner is a flame that makes a devise that combines flammable gas with air, named after Robert Bunsen, the German chemist who invented an improved Bunsen burner in 1855. A Bunsen burner is used in laboratories.
The coolest flame on the Bunsen burner is the yellow-orange flame - approx. 300 0C.
The coolest flame on the Bunsen burner is the yellow-orange flame - approx. 300 0C.
You twist the bottom to change it from a safety flame, blue flame or just a normal flame.
The blue flame of the Bunsen burner is when it is hottest. The yellow flame is the safety flame. you should always start the burner on the safety flame which is produced when the holes on its base are closed.
use the turning dial at the bottom
how do you make the flame on busen burner bigger
The blue flame of a Bunsen burner has a temperature between 500 0C and 700 0C.