Propane boils at -44F so there is 'no flow' below this temperature, it will not vaporize. The ignition temperature is between 920 to 1200F.
-187.6 degrees Centigrade (-305.68 degrees Fahrenheit) is the melting point of propane. Anything below that, and you've got a frozen propane bottle. A slightly more practical question, however, is: At what temperature would a propane bottle fail to dispense its contents? The boiling point of propane is -42.09 degrees Centigrade (-43.76 degrees Fahrenheit). So anything below that temp, and the liquid propane won't boil off inside the bottle to dispense when you open the valve. You'd be able to pour it out like a very cold glass of water.
The weight will never change. Allow the volume can change depending on the temperature. The hotter it is the more propane liquid will expand. This is the reason for only filling propane tanks to 80%.
It depends on the temperature and pressure.
No, propane burns at 2500btu while natural gas burns at only 1012btu. Propane burns over 2 times hotter than natural gas.
No
Yes.
when you burn propane to complete combustion you will get a mixture of carbon dioxide and water vapor.
C3H8 + 5O2 -> 3CO2 + 4H2O That is the complete combustion for Propane.
Propane boils at -44F so there is 'no flow' below this temperature, it will not vaporize. The ignition temperature is between 920 to 1200F.
dont no
-187.6 degrees Centigrade (-305.68 degrees Fahrenheit) is the melting point of propane. Anything below that, and you've got a frozen propane bottle. A slightly more practical question, however, is: At what temperature would a propane bottle fail to dispense its contents? The boiling point of propane is -42.09 degrees Centigrade (-43.76 degrees Fahrenheit). So anything below that temp, and the liquid propane won't boil off inside the bottle to dispense when you open the valve. You'd be able to pour it out like a very cold glass of water.
No. The Sun doesn't "burn" anything; it fuses hydrogen to create helium, and vast quantities of energy. Propane is what powers your gas barbecue. The Sun is powered by nuclear explosions.
As its temperature descends, propane turns to liquid at -42°C.Then it remains liquid until you hit -187.7°C, where it freezesand you have a solid block of propane.
The weight will never change. Allow the volume can change depending on the temperature. The hotter it is the more propane liquid will expand. This is the reason for only filling propane tanks to 80%.
It depends on the temperature and pressure.
No, propane burns at 2500btu while natural gas burns at only 1012btu. Propane burns over 2 times hotter than natural gas.