This question has been in my mind from so long.....
Almost All matters melt at a specific temperature.....
but
Why don't Wood melt??
(need full explanation)
and Happy New Year In advance!
Answers
Answered by
5
Hey
Here is your
Answer
Woods don't melt as their physical structure are destroyed completely while heating i.e, cellulose fibres which might break down into charcoal or it will form CO₂.
Heating would break these long cellulose carbon bonds to form charcoal or carbon dioxide
Answered by
3
Answer:
Wood doesn't melt as wood is a combustible material. If we heat wood in a combustible atmosphere along with oxygen, it would only burn and form ash. It's a solid composite made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Also, wood doesn't have a melting point.
Please mark it as brainliest if it helped
Similar questions
Computer Science,
5 months ago
Science,
5 months ago
English,
11 months ago
History,
11 months ago
Biology,
1 year ago