Charcoal does produce a flame when it is heated to a high enough temperature, usually found when blowing red hot coals till the flames start
Becoz it is a time pass
Sprinkling charcoal in a flame will cause the flame to change colors. This is apparent in fireworks displays, which routinely use charcoal.
green
Burn hydrogen
NaCl will burn with a brick-red colour in a non-luminous Bunsen flame.
Burn slowly with smoke but no flame.
Becoz it is a time pass
Sprinkling charcoal in a flame will cause the flame to change colors. This is apparent in fireworks displays, which routinely use charcoal.
The flame become red.
No they do not. to make charcoal you burn wood
Charcoal burn smokeless so
green
Charcoal does produce a flame when it is heated to a high enough temperature, usually found when blowing red hot coals till the flames start
For a flame to burn it needs fuel, oxygen, and heat.
Charcoal burns with a smokeless flame. Hence, it is used as domestic fuel.
the fire of the non-luminous flame willl haeve a great spark to the flame
heat
What you call a flame is vaporized fuel oxidizing. Vaporizing pure carbon, which is what charcoal (theoretically) is requires temperatures higher than anything you're likely to achieve.