
11-14-2016, 03:38 PM
|
|
Planar Protector
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 1,273
|
|
Is fire a solid, a liquid, or a gas?
Quote:
|
Come on baby, light my mixture of incandescent gases…
|
Quote:
|
Simply defined, fire is a chemical reaction in a mixture of incandescent gases, typically luminous with intense heat. But candle flames, wood fires, and propane fires aren’t created equal. “What constitutes fire depends on the fuel being burned,” says Chen. “The chemistry of each type of fire is different.” They’re similar to the extent that all fires release energy stored in fuels, and if supplied with enough oxygen and enough time, eventually produce carbon dioxide and water. “That’s the end game,” says Chen. “You can’t get more energy out of it without putting more energy in. All fires eventually burn themselves out, unlike solids, liquids, and gases, which can exist indefinitely in the same state.”
|
|
|
|
|