so when you leave the room the bunsen is in the nosier flame (roaring flame)tells the other people that the bunsen is on and they wouldn't burn themselfs
Blue flame is a clean flame.
The yellow flame, with a temperature of max. 300 0C, is used only for the functionality checking of a Bunsen burner. The temperature is too low for heating in many experiments. This is also known as a Dirty flame because of its tendency to cause soot buildup.(you can see this phenomenon in a gas fireplace that is set too high.)
the cleanes t flame is the blue 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.
The blue flame of a Bunsen burner has a temperature between 500 0C and 700 0C.
The maximal temperature is in the roaring blue flame - up to 700 0C.
For a Bunsen burner the lowest temperature is in the extreme lower part of the flame.
With oxygen closed off and a yellow flame the temperature is about 1000 degrees Celsius.
yes
Bunsen burners are preferred over candles or fires because the Bunsen burner produces a much higher temperature (noted by the blue flame) and it is much easier to contain/control a Bunsen Burner flame.
The silent flame on the Bunsen burner is the yellow/orange flame.
No. The lowest temperature , with oxygen closed off and a yellow flame , is about 1000 degrees Celsius. With oxgen feed open temperature of the flame can reach 1300 degrees.
a Bunsen burner flame can be 20* to 2000*
Maximum temperature is 16000C
As hot as yo mam in a oven with ya dad and a finger licking kfc bargin bucket full of diamond encrusted platapus and you are a flamingo man boris johnson will be king! BACON!
The blue flame is hotter then the orange one. Plus the temperature of the flame is not constant in a orange flame but it is more constant in a blue one.