Electrons are excited to higher energy levels and their emissions are observed.
- test of chlorine in water - test of sodium in a mixture by flame test - test of hydrogen sulphide in a gas mixture
Flame of itself is yellow/white. This is white hot carbon particles. Carbon, per se, does not form ions and so cannot give a flame test colour.
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.
A Bunsen Burner is a controlled gas-burning heat source (a "gas candle") that supplies direct heat or flame for scientific experiments and research. (The flame can be blocked by screens to reduce the deposition of soot on test tubes and beakers.)
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
The flame test in analytical chemistry is only qualitative.
Cesium burns with a lilac or bluish-violet flame in a flame test.
The flame test for nickel produces a blue-green color flame.
Cobalt gives a blue flame test while chromium gives a green flame test.
Chlorine gas itself does not emit a colored flame when subjected to a flame test. Instead, it will impart a green color to the flame when a sample containing chlorine (such as a chloride compound) is included in the flame test.
It is not the anions (e.g. iodide) that are responsible for the flame test color, rather the cations such as sodium ion, potassium ion and calcium ion give you different colors.
The colour turns brick Red .
you need to do the flame test you need to do the flame test
yellow Any color in solution; the flame test is for metals.
just looking at the color of the flame --- qualitative
need to find the answer to what doe slithium carbonate look like in a flame test
Flame test