When wood burns, it crackles b/c the gas vaporises. If too much gas is in the wood, it will cause a small explosion.
The answer is the one about wood cause it uses the word crackle to visual the crackle of the fire
Wood can create sparks when burning due to the presence of trapped air pockets or pockets of resin or other flammable substances within the wood. When these pockets heat up and expand rapidly, they can cause the wood to crackle and spark.
It's a sequence of rapid, slight crackles. A crackle is kind of like a sizzle or a hiss.
Onomatopoeia means word that sounds like the thing sounds. If you have ever listened to a wood fire burning, you can hear the crackle of the fire. Your answer would be crackle or crackling.
The water molecules evaporating in the wood.
Burning wood is a chemical reaction because combustion (burning) is an oxidation reaction.
no
enqurie about industarial burning wood manufature
The popping noise occurs when air pockets in the wood are released. These air pockets fill narrow passages within the wooden log. Once the fire burns the wood enclosing the air, the air is then released creating a pop like sound. Popping is more common is some kinds of wood then others.
No. You need the grate in for air circulation around the burning wood.
Yes, burning wood can produce carbon monoxide.
When wood burns, it produces compounds that are also found in burning hair, such as benzene and toluene. These compounds are released during the combustion process and contribute to the similar smell of burning wood and burning hair.