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  • Fire can bring entire buildings to the ground in hours and can devastate entire forests

  • that have stood for thousands of years. It's one of the most powerful forces of nature.

  • But what exactly is fire? When we stare into a flame, what are we actually looking at?

  • Let's find out.

  • The ancient Greeks believed that the universe was made up of four basic elements, fire,

  • water, earth and air. Their belief was built on the premise that you can touch and feel

  • all of these things, they believed they were the building blocks of all matter. We now

  • know that this isn't the case. But the ancient Greeks got one thing in particular, very,

  • very wrong. They completely miss-classified fire, because, fire isn't an element at all.

  • Also it's not really matter either, well not completely anyway. Fire is a mixture of gases

  • such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and water vapour, to name a few; mix those

  • gases with photons of light and thermal energy and you pretty much have the building blocks

  • of fire. Fire is actually the visible side effect of what happens when matter undergoes

  • a change of state by means of a chemical reaction.

  • Of course, you can't blame the Greeks, they did pretty well considering their level of

  • technological advancement. But let's see if we can do a litter better with everything

  • we now know about atoms, elements and chemical reactions.

  • Fire isn't just fire. There's no element or chemical substance known as fire. So what

  • is it? Well, fire is the name we have given to a visual phenomenon that occurs when matter

  • burns. In truth fire is a complex beast and in order to explain exactly what it is, we

  • need to break it down into it core components.

  • The first and most important component of fire is the fuel. This is what's actually

  • burning. Take a candle for example, the fuel is the wax. When we set the wick alight the

  • heat causes the molecules in the wax, which are mostly carbon and hydrogen, to move about

  • erratically. This causes the covalent chemical bonds which are holding the molecules together,

  • the break apart. Releasing individual hydrogen and carbon atoms, as well as hydrogen-carbon

  • molecules. These individual atoms and molecules form a gas which travels upwards from the

  • candle. This process is known as Pyrolysis.

  • The gas travels upwards because of gravity. The air immediately surrounding the candle

  • flame get's heated up. The cold air surrounding the hot puts pressure on the hot air, because

  • cold air is more dense than hot air. The pressure exerted from the cold air pushes the hot air

  • upwards and the heat rises, as this happens the cold air replaces the hot air and gets

  • heated up itself. This process repeats itself for as long as the flame is alight. This is

  • a process known as convection.

  • But heat only rises in this fashion in gravity rich environments. In outer space flames don't

  • travel upwards, they instead radiate in a perfectly spherical pattern from the source.

  • So now we have established fire's second component, gas. The elements that make up the gas in

  • fire depends entirely on the fuel. If you change the fuel, you also change the properties

  • of the fire.

  • But there's still two more components to fire, light and heat. So far we have deduced that

  • fire is mostly gas but gases don't usually give off light, so where does the light come

  • from.

  • This is where oxygen comes in. We all know that oxygen, or some other highly oxygenated

  • substance is required to make a fire and keep it burning. So back to the candle, when the

  • gas rises from the candle the atoms in the gas are still moving around vigorously because

  • of the heat. These excited, but clumsy, atoms collide with oxygen atoms in the air. When

  • the two atoms meet they interact with one-another to cause a chemical reaction. Some of the

  • energy from this reaction gets released as photons of light and so we see a bright blue,

  • orange, red or white flicker. This process is known as chemiluminescence. The remaining

  • atoms that don't collide with oxygen get carried up the flame and eventually heat up to a level

  • where they give off visible light, this is known as incandescence. Now imagine billions

  • of these tiny, chemiluminescent and incandescent chemical reactions, producing billions of

  • tiny little flickers of light, every second - that is what makes a flame burn so brightly.

  • The colour of the flame depends of the molecules that make up the fuel and subsequently the

  • gas which is releases when burned. The temperature at which it burns also effects the colour.

  • You can therefore estimate the temperature of a flame based on its colour. A red flame

  • is anywhere from 525 to 1,000 degrees Celsius. Orange is between 1,000 and 1,2000 degrees

  • Celsius and at white flame is around 1,500 degrees. But a blue flame is significantly

  • hotter at around 3,000 degrees Celsius.

  • And so to the final component of fire, heat. Why is fire hot? Well this is really quite

  • simple. The heat you feel from a flame is just the energy being released from the billions

  • of chemical reactions occurring between the atoms in the flame and the oxygen in the air.

  • All chemical reactions either give off energy as a byproduct or absorb energy. The chemical

  • reactions that happen in a fire are exothermic, which means they give off energy; as opposed

  • to endothermic which is when a reaction absorbs energy.

  • So to summarise, what exactly is it you're seeing when you look into a flame? You're

  • seeing a gas undergoing billions of tiny chemical reactions which are giving off photons of

  • light and thermal energy. Oh and you're also looking at millions of tiny diamonds being

  • created and disappearing right before your eyes. Yes diamonds, in a flame, the carbon

  • atoms released from the fuel come together to create diamond nanoparticles, millions

  • of times per second.

Fire can bring entire buildings to the ground in hours and can devastate entire forests

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