260 ºC = 500 ºF
500 F
it turns into coal
Coal burns around 2800 degrees Fahrenheit.
Technically wood does not burn...It rapidly oxidizes, the gas given off by that oxidation actually burns wood acts as a fuel witch burns better because its often dry. a fire needs 3 things to burn oxygen, heat, and fuel
One way for a fire to burn at a different temperature is it's wood soft wood such as pine burn fast and hot but hard wood such as muscle wood burns slower and cooler but still hot enough to burn you so don't touch it
Plasma is a gas that is heated to the degree that electrons are stripped away from the nuclei of the gas atoms. Fire is a great example of plasma. But as such, plasma does not have a melting point...
Wood such as paper will burn at 451 degrees Fahrenheit. How it necessarily burns is subject to how much moisture is actually in the wood.
Fire burns with the fire triangle. Heat, oxygen, and fuel (wood or gasoline).
Fire does not burn, its whatever if fueling the fire that burns. For example, wood is a fuel that burns, and fire is the result. The speed at which a fuel burns, depends on the fuel. i.e. Wood burns much slower than gasoline.
Wood,
it turns into coal
What burns in a wood fire is the gas inside the wood, and the heat breaks down particles in the wood, causing the bonds that were broken to release energy and the entire compound then combusted.
Fire burns with the fire triangle. Heat, oxygen, and fuel (wood or gasoline).
Neither... The wood is the fuel, but first it needs to become a gas. The gas is what burns.
Coal burns around 2800 degrees Fahrenheit.
The average fireplace fire can reach temperatures of around 1,100-1,200 degrees Fahrenheit. This can vary depending on factors such as the type of wood and airflow in the fireplace.
The autognition Temperature of magnesium is 650oC. It then burns at a max temperature of approx 3100oC.
A chemical property describing something that burns or catches on fire easily is flammable.