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flame
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
flame phenomenon associated with the chemical reaction of a gas that has been heated above its kindling temperature with some other gas, usually atmospheric oxygen (see combustion ). The heat and light given off are characteristic of the specific chemical reaction (or reactions) going on; the luminosity of the flame is usually caused by solid particles of foreign matter present (naturally or artificially) in the burning gas and heated to incandescence; and the shape of the flame is commonly that of a hollow cone. The simple flame occurring when a single gas, such as hydrogen, burns in another gas, such as air, shows two areas, or zones: an inner, cone-shaped area consisting of unburned gas; and an outer area in which the chemical reaction (the combination of hydrogen and oxygen to form water) is taking place. Furthermore, the flame is nonluminous and therefore very hot, since the chemical energy is nearly all transformed into heat energy. This reaction is illustrated in the flame of the oxyhydrogen blowpipe. The flame of the oxyacetylene torch is also extremely hot. A decrease in light with an increase in heat is brought about in the Bunsen burner flame (a more complex flame) by mixing the combustible gas with air before it is ignited. Flames become more complex as the combustible gas increases in complexity, since an increasing number of chemical reactions are involved. Three zones, for example, are apparent in the Bunsen burner flame: an inner zone of unburned gas; a middle zone called the reduction zone or reducing flame, since there the supply of oxygen is deficient and the oxygen is therefore removed from an oxide placed in it; and an outer, or oxidizing, zone. The candle flame is extremely complex. Several zones can be observed: a nonluminous inner portion where the melted wax produces gases; a middle area where the gases are decomposed to hydrogen, which burns, and carbon, which is heated to incandescence; and an outer, hardly visible region in which combustion is complete (carbon dioxide and water being formed). Flames are colored by the introduction of various substances, a fact utilized in the flame test for the identification of certain metals.
Author not available, FLAME.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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flame
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
flame / flām / • n. 1. a hot glowing body of ignited gas that is generated by something on fire: the flame of a candle | a sheet of flame blocked my escape. 2. fig. used in similes and metaphors to refer to something resembling a flame in various ...
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Flame Analysis
Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Flame Analysis Flame tests are useful means of determining the composition of substances. The colors produced by the flame test are compared to known standards. And the presence of certain elements ...
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flame test
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... metal is introduced into a Bunsen burner flame, the metallic ion produces characteristic color in the flame. Some metals and the colors they produce ... strontium, scarlet. The value of this simple flame test is limited by interferences (e.g ...
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flame cell
A Dictionary of Zoology
flame cell Excretory apparatus, similar in structure and function to a solenocyte , that has a tuft of cilia (rather than a single flagellum as in a solenocyte) at the blind end of the cell.
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bead test
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... metallic ions that cannot be identified by a flame test are identified by a bead test. The ... also be used to confirm the results of a flame test. The borax bead test is the most common ... dipped in powdered borax, then heated in the flame of a Bunsen burner until the borax melts ...
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