hydrogen burns at a rate of 50 meters per second .which would make this fake because if this was hydrogen it would flash back into the bottle extinguish it self almost instantly . edwardssteart is right this is not hydrogen ! the flame appears to be sooty and this is a sign of carbon . hydrogen has no soot.
You people are so silly. Let me ask you a question. If you were in a room full of pure hydrogen and lit a match, what would happen? I'm gonna let you answer that.
Well, seeing as how I made it myself, I'm the one who know what he's talking about. Perhaps with what I'm doing, the gas has imperfections in it which cause it to burn a different color. But it is mostly hydrogen gas. Try the experiment yourself. You'll see.
no i know what i'm talking about mate as i drive the hydrogn buses in perth western australia. i can see that your experiment was preformed in the dark but still hydrogen gas still burns a pale blue in colour and not yellow as your flame is. you can confirm my info by contacting boc gases australia.
Well, shows how little you know. If you didn't notice, it IS dark outside. And it most certainly is hydrogen. Here's what I did. I mixed Lye and Water in a Sobe bottle. I then added a bunch of Aluminum foil to it which bonded with the -OH ions to create Aluminum-oxide while displacing the Hydrogen, which released it into the air, and burned when I lit it.
Perhaps you're thinking of Sulfur, which does burn with a short, blue flame and is difficult to see during the day.
put a lid on that:P haha
SKIPPINGRECORD 2 years ago
hydrogen burns at a rate of 50 meters per second .which would make this fake because if this was hydrogen it would flash back into the bottle extinguish it self almost instantly . edwardssteart is right this is not hydrogen ! the flame appears to be sooty and this is a sign of carbon . hydrogen has no soot.
tiggaind 4 years ago
You people are so silly. Let me ask you a question. If you were in a room full of pure hydrogen and lit a match, what would happen? I'm gonna let you answer that.
Kylork 4 years ago
Kyle. No need for your scientific explanation. Tell edwardsstewart to quit bein' a hata lol
TartarControlDuff23 4 years ago
Well, seeing as how I made it myself, I'm the one who know what he's talking about. Perhaps with what I'm doing, the gas has imperfections in it which cause it to burn a different color. But it is mostly hydrogen gas. Try the experiment yourself. You'll see.
Kylork 4 years ago
no i know what i'm talking about mate as i drive the hydrogn buses in perth western australia. i can see that your experiment was preformed in the dark but still hydrogen gas still burns a pale blue in colour and not yellow as your flame is. you can confirm my info by contacting boc gases australia.
edwardsstewart 4 years ago
First of all Who the Hell wants to contact boc gases in freaking australia? Secondly you drive a bus... 'Nuff said.
TartarControlDuff23 4 years ago
This is not a hydrogen gas flame in the bottle, as the flame is burning a yellow colour.
Hydrogen gas when on fire burns a pale blue colour is invisable to the naked eye in sunlight and only visable in dark conditions.
edwardsstewart 4 years ago
Well, shows how little you know. If you didn't notice, it IS dark outside. And it most certainly is hydrogen. Here's what I did. I mixed Lye and Water in a Sobe bottle. I then added a bunch of Aluminum foil to it which bonded with the -OH ions to create Aluminum-oxide while displacing the Hydrogen, which released it into the air, and burned when I lit it.
Perhaps you're thinking of Sulfur, which does burn with a short, blue flame and is difficult to see during the day.
Kylork 4 years ago