CYCLOHEXANE -
orange and blue flame with no soot....
the yellow/safety flame - thats the one that burns less the blue flame - burns THE ROARING FLAME - that one burns a lot and you can tell the difference from the blue flame because it makes a roaring sound
Answer By exposing materials to a hot flame (from a Bunsen burner typically), the color of the flame can be used to identify the material. Certain elements give off a characteristic color when heated to high temperature. See the Related Links for "Wikipedia: flame test" to the bottom for the answer. A method of obtaining an emission spectrum from a sample
Copper: burns a blue-green flame
Real money burns bright Orange...Counterfeit bills burn a Blue color
To heat chemicals or substances in science lab for experiment. There is an air hole in the Bunsen burner where you can screw loose to have open air hole that is the blue flame which is hotter. When there is a close air hole then the flame would be orange in color which is not as hot compared to the blue flame.
Bromine dissolved in cyclohexane appears orange in color.
clean blue flame
The color of Mercury in flame is red.
The flame color of boron in the flame test is bright green.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
The flame of lithium is a bright crimson, or reddish-orange, color.
The flame color of CuCl2 is blue-green. This color is often observed when copper compounds are heated in a flame.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
Cyclohexane has higher color intensity than cyclohexene because cyclohexane is a saturated hydrocarbon with no double bonds, making it more stable and less prone to degradation or color changes. Cyclohexene, on the other hand, is an unsaturated hydrocarbon with a double bond that is more reactive and susceptible to color changes due to oxidation or other chemical reactions.
Silver does not produce a distinctive color in a flame test. It does not exhibit a characteristic flame color like other elements when heated in a flame.
Rhodium does not produce a distinctive color in a flame test.