Flammable 3
Normally Liquids only have flash points......In some cases, flash point also can be determined for solids, its value depends on type of solid.
class II
The flammablilty of liquids is measured by flash point this is the minimum temperature in which a spark will ignite it. Gasoline which is a mixture has a flash point of around 0 degrees C. One of the most flammable liquids, Diethyl ether has a flash point of -45 degrees so is much more flammable than gasoline.
Xenon is not flammable.
Sodium hypochlorite is not flammable.
Antifreeze is Highly Flammable! But its flash point is around 240 degrees Fahrenheit.
It depends on the substance. Yes, all flammable substances have a "flash-point". Every substance has a different flash point expressed in degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit. If the temperature is below the flash point you will not be able to ignite it. And the higher the temp above the flash-point the more readily it will burn.
Cardboard hasn't a freezing point.
what is a flashpoint <><><> The temperature at which a substance gives off an ignitable vapor is the flash point. If the flash point is under 100 degrees F, it is a flammable (gasoline). If it is over 100, it is a combustible (diesel fuel). Flash point is NOT the ignition temperature.
Flash point for ammonia is the point where it becomes flammable after a phase change from a liquid to gas forming a flammable mixture in air. Obviously this is different to the lowest flammable concentration in air. In the case of ammonia it is 11 degrees according to the MSDS: http://msds.chem.ox.ac.uk/AM/ammonia_anhydrous.html
Class 3, Flammable liquid, has a flash point of not more than 60 degrees C.
Normally Liquids only have flash points......In some cases, flash point also can be determined for solids, its value depends on type of solid.
Actually, Diesel is not flammable, it is combustible. The difference is the flash point. Diesel does not flash until 143 degrees Fahrenheit. Anything between 100 and 200 is combustible; less than 100 is flammable. Compare it to "gasoline" which has a flash point of -42 F (I think).
class II
The flash point is the temperature at which a liquid gives off an ignitable vapor. It is NOT the smoke point, nor the ignition point. Unrefined peanut oil has a smoke point (temperature at which it begins to break down, give off smoke) of 320 degrees Fahrenheit, while refined peanut oil has a smoke point of 448 degrees Fahrenheit. The ignition point of both oils is 700 degrees Fahrenheit, and the flash point 600 degrees Fahrenheit.
Corrosive Bases
The flammablilty of liquids is measured by flash point this is the minimum temperature in which a spark will ignite it. Gasoline which is a mixture has a flash point of around 0 degrees C. One of the most flammable liquids, Diethyl ether has a flash point of -45 degrees so is much more flammable than gasoline.