Chapter 6 Combustion And Flame Notes

  • Combustion: The process of burning in the presence of oxygen to produce heat and light
  • Examples of combustion: Burning of paper, burning of coal, burning of CNG, etc.
  • Necessary conditions for combustion: Fuel, air or oxygen, temperature above ignition temperature
  • Ignition temperature: Minimum temperature at which substance catches fire. Below ignition temperature substance do not catch fire.
  • Types of Combustion :
    • Rapid combustion – Burns rapidly producing heat and light. Eg. Gaseous fuel
    • Spontaneous combustion – Combustion in which the substances catches fire by itself without the help of external heat. E.g. Yellow phosphorus
    • Explosion – Produces heat, light and sound on large amount. E.g. firecrackers
  • Fire control:
    • Use of blanket
    • Use of fire extinguisher
    • Fire brigade
  • Flame: Burning part of candle producing light
  • Structure of flame
    • Outer zone (blue zone) – It is the outermost part and hottest part of the flame where vapours undergo complete combustion.
    • Innermost zone (dark zone) – In this region vapor remains unburnt and temperature is coolest comparatively.
    • Middle zone (illumination zone) – In this region, vapor undergo partial combustion producing heat and light. Temperature is hotter than the innermost zone and cooler than outer zone.
  • Fuel: Substances that undergo combustion in the presence of air producing large amount of energy
  • Types of fuels and examples:
    Types of fuels Examples
    Solid fuels Coal, wood, charcoal, etc.
    Liquid fuels Petrol, diesel, ethanol, kerosene, etc.
    Gaseous fuels LPG, CNG, hydrogen, biogas, etc.
  • Calorific value: It is the amount of heat energy produced during complete combustion of 1kg of a fuel. Higher the calorific value larger will be the heat produced by the fuel.
  • Unit of calorific value – kilojoule per kg (kJ/kg)
  • Properties of good fuel:
    • It is cheap and readily available.
    • It is easy to store and transport.
    • Ignition temperature must be moderate and calorific value must be higher.
    • Must not produce harmful products
  • Harmful effects of burning fuels
    • Burning coal and petroleum produces soot particles, which remains in the air for a longer time. This causes diseases like asthma.
    • Incomplete combustion of fuel produces carbon monoxide. It is a poisonous gas, if breath in such air may prove fatal to life.
    • Use of fossil fuel produces large amounts of carbon dioxide, which ultimately result in the greenhouse effect.
    • Burning coal, diesel and petrol produces sulphur dioxide and releases nitrogen in the air. This mixes with rain water causing acid rain.