It depends on the substance. Yes, all flammable substances have a "flash-point". Every substance has a different flash point expressed in degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit. If the temperature is below the flash point you will not be able to ignite it. And the higher the temp above the flash-point the more readily it will burn.
The flash point of SBS rubber is not applicable as it is not a flammable material. SBS rubber is a type of synthetic rubber that does not have a flash point because it does not ignite or burn easily.
The flash point of a flammable liquid is the lowest temperature at which it can form an ignitable mixture in air. At this temperature the vapor may cease to burn when the source of ignition is removed. A slightly higher temperature, the fire point, is defined as the temperature at which the vapor continues to burn after being ignited. Neither of these parameters is related to the temperatures of the ignition source or of the burning liquid, which are much higher. The flash point is often used as one descriptive characteristic of liquid fuel, but it is also used to describe liquids that are not used intentionally as fuels
It will depend on the oxidizer you are using. Nitrate-aluminum flash powders are pretty stable, but a ammonium perchlorate-aluminum flash powder is extremely shock sensitive. One scrap on the ground and it could ignite. By the way, flash powders (with the exception of ammonium nitrate and aluminum which is explosive) do not detonate; they just burn very fast.
By grinding the surface area of the sample increase and the contact between the solvent and solute is improved.
flash magic
Yes, if you have exposure,even from a side angle at a fairly close distance it can give you a flash burn. I have had it happen to me with a 75watt incandescent bulb not properly shielded.
i tried to drag from flash drive to cd , can ot work cd is empty
how do i burn games off the internet
A thunderbolt is a flash of lightning. Zeus uses them as spears or to burn.
burn, glow, flare, be ablaze, shine, flash, radiate
Hollywood on Set - 2003 Lakeview Terrace Flash of Genius Burn After Reading was released on: USA: 19 September 2008
to this day diesel is the "best" to burn it has a higher flash point than gasoline so it burns hotter and better
Flash Burn and Blindness
Well it depends on how bad your hot flashes are really
It depends on the substance. Yes, all flammable substances have a "flash-point". Every substance has a different flash point expressed in degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit. If the temperature is below the flash point you will not be able to ignite it. And the higher the temp above the flash-point the more readily it will burn.
Yes. Full strength antifreeze is mostly ethylene glycol, and will burn. The flash point is about 250 degrees, so it won't burn unless it is very warm, or on a warm surface (like an exhaust manifold).