Many organic solvents, like ether, are extremely and dangerously flammable.
Water is a solvent that turns into a solid when heated, forming ice.
Heating is believe to increase the rate of reaction, this depends on the type of reaction (if it is exothermic or endothermic). different reactions are heated at different times, some are as soon as the reagents are mixed while other are before preheated before mixing. If heating is required, then it has to be below boiling point of the solvent and reactant (unless you want to isolate a low boiling compound)
Heating an organic compound can cause it to undergo various chemical reactions such as combustion, decomposition, or oxidation, leading to changes in its chemical composition or structure. The specific effect will depend on the compound being heated and the conditions under which it is heated.
your mom is the answer
the iron ring, the wire mesh over the ring, the beaker or whatever else was being heated. There are special tongs for most types of glassware or porcelain objects that are heated over a Bunsen burner.
Examples: Bunsen burner, alcohol burner, electrically heated plate, infrared lamp.Attention: heating of organic solvents may be the cause of fires and explosions !
Water is a solvent that turns into a solid when heated, forming ice.
Heating is believe to increase the rate of reaction, this depends on the type of reaction (if it is exothermic or endothermic). different reactions are heated at different times, some are as soon as the reagents are mixed while other are before preheated before mixing. If heating is required, then it has to be below boiling point of the solvent and reactant (unless you want to isolate a low boiling compound)
Heating an organic compound can cause it to undergo various chemical reactions such as combustion, decomposition, or oxidation, leading to changes in its chemical composition or structure. The specific effect will depend on the compound being heated and the conditions under which it is heated.
your mom is the answer
When a solution is strongly heated in a flame, the atoms and molecules gain kinetic energy, causing them to move faster and collide more frequently. This can lead to increased chemical reactions, vaporization of the solution, and potentially decomposition of the molecules into smaller fragments or different chemical species.
When a solvent is heated, it can dissolve more solute (increased solubility) because the increased temperature increases the kinetic energy of solvent molecules, allowing them to break apart solute molecules more easily. On the other hand, heating the solvent can decrease the solubility of gases since gases are less soluble in warmer solutions due to decreased gas solubility at higher temperatures.
the iron ring, the wire mesh over the ring, the beaker or whatever else was being heated. There are special tongs for most types of glassware or porcelain objects that are heated over a Bunsen burner.
tokamak
Organic matter was compressed and heated
When a solution is heated, the solvent usually evaporates, leaving behind the solute in a more concentrated form. This process is known as evaporation or drying.
The substance collected by evaporation is typically the solvent that was initially dissolved in a solution. As the solution is heated and the solvent evaporates, it leaves behind the solute in a more concentrated form.