Water is actually made from two highly flammable gases; oxygen and hydrogen. Either of them separately will explode.
To make water into a flammable gasses, you have to separate the hydrogen and oxygen molecules into their constituent gaseous elements. This is most commonly achieved through a process called hydrolysis. See the related link below for more information about hydrolysis.
stable amounts of glucose iodine does this.
the change of state in the water cycle is when the sun heats the water which makes it evaporate. This is what makes a cloud, the water vapour then condenses which makes it rain. THis causes the cycle to start all over again. Writen By James Hayman
Evaporation, as when water is boiled. It changes phase, from a liquid to water vapor, a gas which is invisible.
No, Benedict's solution is not highly flammable. It is a mixture of water, sodium citrate, and citric acid, which are not flammable substances.
Methane is used in gas fires because it is easily ignited and produces a clean blue flame when burned. It is a reliable and efficient fuel source for heating and cooking applications in homes and commercial settings.
both gases are flamable.
Yes, hydrogen is flammable. It can easily ignite and burn in the presence of oxygen, producing heat and water vapor.
No, radon is an inert noble gas.
it can make water(h20)when mixed with oxygen it is an extremly flamable gas for example the Hindenburg was filled with hydrogen gas to make it lift off but the designers miss calculated so it caused a horrendess effect
Oxygen
To ignite the compressed flamable gas in an internal combustion engine
oil gets on top of water and oil is flamable
A gas is something that is not a solid or a liquid like water.
Yes. due to scientific reasons they are both able to catch flame if left uncare for. :)
No, it not flamable so why should it
no, argon is a noble gas and is not flamable
Well depends what gas you put in if it oxygen then it will evaporate but if it a gas which is flamable, it explode