Diesel fuel is classified as combustible rather than flammable. This means it has a higher flash point, typically around 100-140°F (38-60°C), making it less likely to ignite at normal temperatures. However, it can still catch fire if exposed to an open flame or sufficient heat, so proper handling and storage are essential to prevent accidents.
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).
The fuel that goes in to an internal combustible engine are gasoline or diesel fuel.
Not flammable at room temperature, but combustible.
Alcohol is both flammable and combustible.
No, ammonia is not combustible on its own. However, it can act as a fuel and support combustion in the presence of other flammable materials.
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.
gasolinekerosinefuel oilbunker fuel oildiesel oilcetanehexaneheptaneoctanenonanemolten asphaltetc.Technically, anything with a closed-cup flash point at or above 100 degrees F would be classified as a "combustible liquid" not "flammable liquid". This would include diesel and fuel oil. NFPA 30.
Diesel fuel is the kind of fuel used by diesel engines. Its a combustible fuel refined from crude oil - just as is gasoline - but diesel has a much higher flash point than gasoline. Its grade is measured in cetane rather than octane
Flammable gas refers to any gas that can ignite and burn easily under normal conditions, while combustible gas is a subset of flammable gas and refers specifically to gases that can ignite and burn in the presence of oxygen. In other words, all combustible gases are flammable, but not all flammable gases are necessarily combustible.
no, its a combustible
Flammable catches on fire. Combustible explodes. Boooyah!
Neither. Argon is chemically inert. It is neither flammable nor combustible.