Chemistry, asked by tirenrenee, 11 months ago

Explain why a non-luminous flame should always be converted to luminous when not in use.

Answers

Answered by Tanyathebestgamer
1

Explanation:

Because luminous flames don't burn as efficiently as non-luminous ones, they don't produce as much energy. This means that the non-luminous flames have a lot more energy than luminous ones, and their flames are actually hotter. This is why the luminous ones look yellow and the non-luminous ones look blue.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

All of the carbon that gets used can be turned into CO2, so there's actually no soot. Because luminous flames don't burn as efficiently as non-luminous ones, they don't produce as much energy. This means that the non-luminous flames have a lot more energy than luminous ones, and their flames are actually hotter.

Explanation:

Please mark my ans as brainliest

Similar questions