if you heat it
yes it can but only with a broken Bunsen burner
When carbon is ignited, it burns with a blue flame.
All of them. At a high enough temperature, even diamond will burn, and produce (ridiculously expensive) carbon dioxide.
The addition of carbon dioxide to a fire can extinguish it because carbon dioxide displaces oxygen, which is necessary for the fire to burn. This process suffocates the fire, preventing it from continuing to burn.
Carbon monoxide is an odorless, colorless gas that forms when the carbon in fuels does not burn completely. It is a toxic gas that can be harmful when inhaled in high concentrations.
Carbon dioxide cannot burn.
carbon dioxide
Carbon burn in air.
An imperfect burn of a hydrocarbon like methane can produce carbon monoxide (CO) instead of carbon dioxide (CO2), due to insufficient oxygen. The chemical equation for an imperfect burn of methane is CH4 + O2 → CO + H2O.
No, carbon dioxide is non-flammable and does not burn. When carbon dioxide is exposed to a flame, it will not react or produce a popping sound.
yes it can but only with a broken Bunsen burner
Carbon dioxide does not burn.
Into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.
The wood in a pencil will burn in three or four minutes. The graphite inside is pure carbon which will not burn, but at around 800 degrees Celsius will react with oxygen to form carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon monoxide (CO).
When carbon is ignited, it burns with a blue flame.
Carbon Dioxide and a very tiny bit of Carbon Monoxide
Yes, carbon monoxide burns with a blue flame, producing carbon dioxide.