It explodes actually.
Lithium flame colours are red or crimson when burned in a flame. This is due to the presence of lithium ions emitting light at specific wavelengths as they are heated in the flame. The colour can vary slightly depending on the temperature of the flame and other factors.
Lithium salts, such as lithium chloride or lithium carbonate, are known to produce lilac flames when burned. This color results from the excitation of lithium ions in the flame.
sodium-yellow lithium-red barium-apple green copper-dark green calcium-brick red
Lithium compounds typically produce a red or crimson flame color when burned in a fire.
the color of the flame produced when you burn rubidium is tha same color OS what potassium produce-the colour violet
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
The red color in a lithium flame is due to the excitation of lithium atoms. When lithium is heated in a flame, the electrons in the lithium atoms are excited to higher energy levels. As they return to their ground state, they emit light in the red part of the spectrum, resulting in the characteristic red color of a lithium flame.
Lithium flame colours are red or crimson when burned in a flame. This is due to the presence of lithium ions emitting light at specific wavelengths as they are heated in the flame. The colour can vary slightly depending on the temperature of the flame and other factors.
Lithium salts, such as lithium chloride or lithium carbonate, are known to produce lilac flames when burned. This color results from the excitation of lithium ions in the flame.
The colour turns brick Red .
lithium chloride is red in colour ref: http://eip.k20center.org/wp-content/uploads/flame-test-teacher1.doc
sivery whiteA tungsten electrode can have 1.5 or 2 % lanthanum oxide. A tungsten electrode with 1.5 % will be gold, and a tungsten electrode with 2 % will be blue.
sodium-yellow lithium-red barium-apple green copper-dark green calcium-brick red
Lithium compounds typically produce a red or crimson flame color when burned in a fire.
When you burn lithium chloride, or any other lithium salt, you get a crimson flame, due to the positive lithium ions. The heat from burning the substance excites the outer electrons of the lithium ions to higher energy levels, when they drop back to the ground state, energy is released as light, and the wavelength of that light corresponding to that drop is crimson, hence we see a crimson flame.
Lithium compounds such as lithium nitrite produce a strong red when heated strongly in a Bunsen burner. You can see this by searching for lithium flame colour on youtube.com.You can see its spectrum on wikipedia.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.