Yes. The CO2 suffocates that fire by depleting the oxygen feeding it.
It suffocates a fire. Its best used on chemicals
It covers the burning material, pushing out air - which the fire needs to 'breathe'. Essentially - it suffocates the fire.
Flour can be used to extinguish a fire by smothering it. When flour is thrown onto a fire, it cuts off the oxygen supply, which is necessary for the fire to burn. This suffocates the flames and helps to put out the fire.
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.
Suffocates My Words to You was created in 2001.
Baking powder can be used to extinguish a fire because it releases carbon dioxide gas when heated, which displaces oxygen and suffocates the flames.
Dry powder essentially "suffocates" a fire by displacing the oxygen necessary to maintain the flame. Which takes out one of the three vital things a fire needs, heat, oxygen and fuel.
Cold water helps to put out a fire by reducing the temperature of the fuel source below its ignition point, thereby extinguishing the flames. It also helps to create steam which displaces oxygen and suffocates the fire.
Fire needs oxygen from the air just like we do. When water gets poured on it, it suffocates and goes out.
It suffocates trees and kills them.
Fire stops under water because water deprives the fire of oxygen, which is essential for combustion. Without oxygen, the chemical reaction that sustains the fire cannot continue, causing the flames to be extinguished.