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  • Bunsen burner is perhaps one of the most iconic symbols of chemistry.

  • A Bunsen burner, just to remind you, consists of a small jet down here with two holes, and a metal cylinder that you can rotate

  • so that you can open and shut those holes.

  • And the gas comes down the tube, up the jet, and air comes through these big holes, and the flame comes out of the top.

  • If you look at a flame, you can see different parts are different colours,

  • but most people just have to take their teacher or professor's word

  • that some bits of the flame are hotter than others.

  • With a thermal imaging camera we can actually show you that this is true.

  • And also, you can see more structure to the flame than you can with your eye.

  • So, Bunsen burners are usually used in two different modes: there's the mode where the air holes are covered up

  • and you get quite a large, yellow wavy flame.

  • The yellow colour is from hot carbon particles which are radiating out heat.

  • In the cooler mode, where you haven't got much air, the gas comes up and catches fire when it comes in contact with air.

  • The heat of the flame generates carbon particles from incomplete combustion with the methane, which is in the gas, and eventually those particles burn,

  • but the yellow colour of the flame comes from those carbon particles.

  • When the holes are closed, the gas doesn't meet any air until it gets to the top.

  • When we open the holes, we mix gas and air down here, and then they burn right at the top.

  • And they burst into flames, and the flame is much hotter because the reaction is much faster.

  • Now, the thing that intrigues me is that I've always been taught that the blue-coloured cone that you see on the Bunsen burner

  • ends, at its tip, at the hottest place in the flame.

  • The truth is slightly more complicated than what I was told.

  • There's all sorts of turbulence inside the flame, and the hottest point moves around a bit.

  • But, I think why we were told "Keep whatever you're heating, particularly if you're trying to do glass-blowing,

  • if you keep the glass at the tip of the blue cone, you will be, on average, at the hottest point in the flame."

  • It doesn't mean that any instant that is the hottest part.

  • And, for me, it is really very beautiful watching these flames, and to see how the temperature varies is really very nice.

  • And what you can't see with your naked eye, but you can see really nicely with the camera,

  • is the cool layer of air (it's not cold, but it's still quite hot, but much cooler) that is round the edge of the flame.

  • The other thing is that it's nice to see how the heat moves down the Bunsen burner.

  • Of course, most chemists know, or they learn by experience, that when you switch a Bunsen burner off, the top is hot.

  • If you look at the way the Bunsen burner is constructed, you can see that there's actually a double layer of metal.

  • I suspect the idea of that is to stop you burning your fingers quite so badly, but it still gets pretty hot.

  • It must be said, and we'd explained this on our Bunsen burner video, that the burner was probably invented by Bunsen's technician, not by Bunsen.

  • Professors in those days tended to take credit for their technicians' work, but Bunsen himself apparently used to burn his fingers

  • so badly that the skin was black and smoking when he was trying to do glass-blowing.

  • Nowadays, glass blowers have much more elegant torches, as you will have seen on some of our videos of glass-blowing.

  • Neil, our technician, had an interesting idea of taking a rod of carbon, and he put it into the flame.

  • He had a carbon rod because glass blowers often use carbon rods to touch on their glass,

  • because the glass, even when it's molten, does not stick to the carbon.

  • And if you watch, you can see how the heat gradually goes along the rod, and the rod gets hotter and hotter,

  • and Neil is quite a tough guy, but eventually it got even too hot for him to hold, and he had to put it down in a hurry.

  • But it is a very nice demonstration of how heat can be conducted along rods like that.

  • Brady: We'd like to thank Google's Making and Science Team for making this video possible.

  • It's not the only film they've supported lately; there's a bunch of stuff across lots of channels.

  • I've put a link on the screen and in the video description.

  • And while you're exploring other parts of YouTube, why not check out my channel Objectivity,

  • where every week we look at a new science treasure from archives of the Royal Society?

  • We've just posted our 100th object, and it's a real special one!

  • I'll also put links on the screen and in the video description.

Bunsen burner is perhaps one of the most iconic symbols of chemistry.

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