sulphur
S + O2 = SO2
Potassium burns with a purple flame.
Hydrogen is the lightest and most abundant element in the universe. It is a colorless, odorless gas at room temperature and pressure. It is highly flammable and burns with a pale blue flame.
Magnesium burns in oxygen with a bright, white light and a lilac-colored flame. This reaction is highly exothermic and produces magnesium oxide as a product.
hydrogen color flame test is purple due to the acids and element combinationa
Potassium has a violet color in the flame test.
lithium chloride burns with a red flame but im not sure what element on its own burns with a red flame =s
Potassium burns with a purple flame.
Hydrogen is the lightest and most abundant element in the universe. It is a colorless, odorless gas at room temperature and pressure. It is highly flammable and burns with a pale blue flame.
The element that burns brilliantly in the air is magnesium. Magnesium is an alkaline Earth metal with the atomic number 12.
A better question would be "which elements burn red", as more than one element burns red. Lithium chloride burns red, calcium chloride burnds a red-orange, and strontium chloride burns bright red.
A fellow flame is produced when sodium is burned as a single element. Sodium as a compound :, baking soda, washing soda, and table salt also burns yellow .
Magnesium burns in oxygen with a bright, white light and a lilac-colored flame. This reaction is highly exothermic and produces magnesium oxide as a product.
My Flame Burns Blue was created in 2004-07.
Copper is a metallic element that matches this description. It has a bluish-white color in its pure form, tarnishes slightly in moist air to form a greenish patina, and burns with a bluish-green flame when heated.
hydrogen color flame test is purple due to the acids and element combinationa
Potassium has a violet color in the flame test.
Chromium I don't know about Chrome, maybe, but Copper definitely does and is the most well known for doing so. So I would say Copper. Copper burns blue-green in a flame test. Thallium burns bright green.