Flammable liquid: A liquid that catches on fire
Flammable solid: A solid, other than a blasting agent or explosive, that is liable to cause fires through friction, absorption of moisture, spontaneous chemical change, retained heat from processing, or which can be ignited readily.
No, nitrogen, whether solid, liquid, or gas, is relatively inert.
Hexane is more flammable than potassium sulfate. Hexane is a highly flammable liquid that can easily ignite when exposed to a flame or spark, while potassium sulfate is a solid compound that is not flammable under typical conditions.
The main difference between the states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) lies in how the particles are arranged and how they move. In a solid, particles are tightly packed and vibrate in place. In a liquid, particles are close together but can move past each other. In a gas, particles are far apart and move freely.
Melting is when you heat something up and it turns from a solid state into a liquid state, such as adding heat to ice (solid) melts it to water (liquid). Freezing is the opposite, so cooling a liquid until it becomes a solid.
Calcium ethanoate is a salt formed from the reaction between calcium hydroxide and acetic acid, while ethanol is a simple organic compound classified as an alcohol. Calcium ethanoate is solid at room temperature, while ethanol is a liquid. They have different chemical structures and properties due to their distinct compositions.
Nothing.
the only difference is the energy of the atoms
wax as a solid is not flammable it will melt but not catch fire.wax as a liquid will only melt.so. no^^ no. your wrong. lolwax as a solid does turn to liquid, and in a candle, for example, the wick is burning the vapour from the liquid wax which is actually very flammable.
The atoms in a solid are in a tighter formation that as they are in a liquid. In a liquid, They are loose and have the ability to pour.
The molecules in a solid vibrate in place. The molecules of a liquid are moving about.
one is solid and one is liquid
supernatant - liquid above and solid in the bottom, the supernatant is the liquid above that is going to be poured off (to separate the solid and the liquid) filtrate - it is also the liquid part but the solid and liquid is separated differently, for example coffee the filter paper holds on to residue (solid) and the liquid part (filtrate) passes I think that is the difference.
When solid start to turn into liquid its melting point. When liquid start turning into solid its freezing point.
As we all know d 3 forms of matter,Solid Liquid and Gas,the difference between these 3 is the distance between the molecules of matter, the order of dist between these states is as below solid<liquid<gas.
The volume of a liquid is typically smaller than that of the corresponding solid because the molecules are more tightly packed in the solid phase due to the stronger intermolecular forces. In the case of nitrogen, the volume of liquid nitrogen is smaller than that of solid nitrogen because the molecules in liquid nitrogen are more closely packed than in solid nitrogen.
in solid mixing solid particles are mixed randomly but in liquid mixing the liquid droplets are mixed as homogeneously.
The difference will be in their physical state i.e., solid and liquid state and in their chemical composition. Solid fuels that are used are the filling inside bombs i.e,. gun powder. Liquid fuels used are RDX etc.