If you are referring to a Bunsen burner, used in laboratories to heat chemicals, it was named for it's inventor- Robert Bunsen. See link at bottom of page.
from minerals and are separated in distillation.
No, Robert Bunsen did not invent the Bunsen burner. It was actually invented by Michael Faraday in the 19th century. The Bunsen burner is named after Bunsen as he helped popularize its use in laboratories.
He was a pioneer in Photo Chemistry and also in Organoarsenic chemistry
born: March 31,1811 died:august 16,1899
The Bunsen burner was invented by German chemist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen in the 19th century. It is a common laboratory tool used for heating, sterilizing, and combustion reactions in scientific experiments.
The German surname of Bunsen is first found in the early records of Prussia.
He came from Germany
The word Bunsen burner is spelled with the capital letter B because the device is named after Robert Bunsen, the scientist who suggested the design principles for a gas laboratory heating device.
Robert Bunsen invented the Bunsen Burner in 1867.
Robert Bunsen invented the Bunsen burner if that is what you mean?
Soon i think
from minerals and are separated in distillation.
No, Robert Bunsen did not invent the Bunsen burner. It was actually invented by Michael Faraday in the 19th century. The Bunsen burner is named after Bunsen as he helped popularize its use in laboratories.
The Bunsen burner,the Bunsen cell battery
Robert Bunsen was the inventor of the Bunsen burner
A Bunsen burner is a flame that makes a devise that combines flammable gas with air, named after Robert Bunsen, the German chemist who invented an improved Bunsen burner in 1855. A Bunsen burner is used in laboratories.
Bunsen burner: Robert Bunsen and Peter Desaga, Heidelberg (Germany), 1855