The major difference between steel and wood is that steel is in organic due to its lack of carbon, and wood is organic comprised of organic material. Because of this, their properties will differ wildly.
YES!
heat change in shape change in size change is texture, I think those are right anwser
wood
No, it isn't. Sorry! You can use the wood from Hom Stores though.
Water doesn't remove a flammable element from burning wood. It simply lowers the temperature.
The minimum distance between flammable material & radio depends the amount of radiation of radio. The flammable things may be wood because the cabinet is wood.
If it is made out of flammable material, like wood, then yes.
A chemical property describing something that burns or catches on fire easily is flammable.
Yes, all burning processes are redox reactions between oxygen and the material that's burning.
wet wood
Burning is an oxidation (reaction with oxygen): wood is an organic material and easily burn. The final products are water, carbon dioxide and ash.
Class A extinguishers are designed for "ordinary flammable materials" (organic solids such as paper and wood) but not liquids like gasoline, grease, electrical fires, or flammable metals.
1. Oil is a flammable substance. 2. My house made of wood is flammable. 3. If your spray your wood with gasoline it becomes flammable. 4. If you don't put out your ciggerette you can make your bed flammable. 5. when your crash your car be careful because it can become flammable.
The residue (soot) creosote from the burning wood in the chimney catches fire. Creosote need to reach at least level 2 to become flammable
1. Oil is a flammable substance. 2. My house made of wood is flammable. 3. If your spray your wood with gasoline it becomes flammable. 4. If you don't put out your ciggerette you can make your bed flammable. 5. when your crash your car be careful because it can become flammable.
No. Oxygen is not flammable. Rather, it supports the combustion of flammable materials. Fire is a chemical reaction between oxygen and some flammable material. Higher concentrations of oxygen will cause a fire to burn hotter and faster.