42 points

Water is just burnt hydrogen, or burnt oxygen. Maybe burnt both. Water is hydrogen and oxygen ashes.

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9 points

Really? I remember asking someone why the two happily ignite, but together never do, and their explanation was that the molecular bond is too strong it keeps them stable?

I was a teenager at the time though, so just accepted it - is this really accurate?

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40 points
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It’s absolutely accurate, you’re just missing the fact that H2 and O2 have to oxidize, aka “burn,” to create that bond. Literally the easiest way to “create” water is to take a flask of pure hydrogen, a flask of pure oxygen that contains roughly 2.5 times the hydrogen vs oxygen to account for inefficiencies, “pour” those flasks into a container, and light it on fire. The ensuing explosion will convert almost all the hydrogen and most of the oxygen into water. Please stand well back, like behind a reinforced bunker wall if you attempt this.

Forming that bond frees up a single Oxygen atom, splitting the bond it has with its partner and causing a reaction that ends up releasing the excess energy of the Oxygen molecule, and bonding one of the Oxygen atoms to two Hydrogen atoms, the extra Oxygen atom then allows the oxidation process to happen. It also releases a large amount of energy, if you’re a Hydrogen or Oxygen atom, or a tiny amount of mostly heat energy if you’re a human. (Problem if you’re a human is that you aren’t capable of causing a single H2+O2+e→O1+H2O+e^x, so you’re gonna get a large explosion for even small amounts of a mixture)

This is also true of all other “ash” products created by oxidization of pretty much any fuel from trees to iron. Once you “burn” the compound, it becomes chemically inert for further oxidation, because the atomic bonds of the molecules are about as stable as they can get.

This is why, chemically and physicsally speaking, burning or Oxidizing fuel creates plasma that we call fire. That plasma is the excess energy being expelled as the fuel combines with mostly Oxygen, to form ashes.

Water just happens to be the only type of ash we are familiar with that isn’t dry, and instead gets things wet. There may be a few others, but I suspect that most of them are acids or bases that we don’t regularly have any contact with.

Edit: source: former US Navy Nuclear Power Program Electronics Technician Instructor. I understand the physics involved, and can easily do the math that the chemistry uses. I don’t know shit about biology, so there are probably some biological protein chains that negate literally everything I just said.

Edit 2: Sorry for the first 20 minutes, my comment was reversed with O2 and H2. I literally had to type out the math to remind myself how that reaction works.

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6 points

Holy shit, that’s insane - thank you!

Still surprised water is ash, and that there’s combustion involved… Am n00b :)

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5 points
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roughly 2.5 times the hydrogen vs oxygen to account for inefficiencies

Why 2.5 and not 2? Wouldn’t a stoichiometric mix be the most efficient?

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4 points

Hey man, roughly how much hydrogen would be needed to make 25ml of water?

And secondly. Where can I buy purr hydrogen and pure oxygen?

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4 points

As others said, hydrogen and oxygen gas in the same container will not create water until energy is put in. Fill a Ballon with a balloon with a 2:1 molar ratio of H2 and O2, then pop the Ballon with a flame, and you will get a cloud of water vapor. Without the fire, popping the balloons with a needle will only release the gases.

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3 points

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1 point
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1 point
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34 points

Can also be done with sodium and chlorine! Or any number of covalent bonds

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14 points
2 points

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

the process is a little more complicated and technically more dangerous.

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

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7 points

No, salt is not water, deceiver!

You have the right to drink water and to call for hydrological assistance.

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19 points

So I know this is just a meme but it’s oxygen really the only reason fire can exist? Like don’t other things burn on their own with no oxygen present?

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25 points

There are other chemical reactions that produce heat, but fire is specifically a rapid oxidation. There are other oxidizers though that can result in an oxidation type reaction though, a few are even better than oxygen at it even, like fluorine (which is why pure fluorine is such dangerous stuff)

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7 points

Chlorine Trifluoride is a better oxidizer than Oxygen itself. Hell, the germans in WW2 tried making self igniting flamethrowers with the stuff. But stopped because it was too nasty to work with.

At that point, they might as well just spray it directly on people. Screw using a fuel to ignite when the trifluoride is enough to set fire to literally anything. Even wet sand can be burnt by it.

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8 points

Which reminds me of this quote "It is, of course, extremely toxic, but that’s the least of the problem. It is hypergolic with every known fuel, and so rapidly hypergolic that no ignition delay has ever been measured. It is also hypergolic with such things as cloth, wood, and test engineers, not to mention asbestos, sand, and water-with which it reacts explosively. It can be kept in some of the ordinary structural metals-steel, copper, aluminium, etc.-because of the formation of a thin film of insoluble metal fluoride which protects the bulk of the metal, just as the invisible coat of oxide on aluminium keeps it from burning up in the atmosphere. If, however, this coat is melted or scrubbed off, and has no chance to reform, the operator is confronted with the problem of coping with a metal-fluorine fire. For dealing with this situation, I have always recommended a good pair of running shoes. "

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4 points

And why it makes great rocket fuel…

…if you ignore all the other side effects

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14 points

There can be a release of energy without oxygen, but it will not result in a fire, just an explosion. You can make arguments for things like the sun “burning” in the vacuum of space, but that is fusion, and a far different thing than lighting a match.

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9 points

Fair and as for the sun I’ve always seen it as more of just a constant nuclear explosion.

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12 points

Gravity powered fusion bomb

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12 points

There are plenty of things that can cause fires that are not oxygen, and don’t contain oxygen.

The halogens, Fluorine and Chlorine in particular, are powerful oxidizing agents on their own and can produce flames in the same manner as common flames.

Here’s a report on the spectra of flames produced by combustion in a Fluorine atmosphere (PDF warning).

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1 point

Now I need a NileRed video on combustion in a fluorine atmosphere.

(Also, props to your username. I see you, fam.)

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9 points

Some metals (the ones that require super special fire extinguishers) can keep an exothermic reaction going (magnesium I believe, and sodium I’m pretty sure) but rapid oxidation (rusting) is the most common method of combustion.

Oxygen is so combustible that it’s toxic to life, and would have killed life as it was a billion years ago (number from my ass) which produced oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis if it weren’t for the development of mitochondria.

A few other things (elements) can burn without oxygen, but not many, and they normally need a pretty large activation temperature.

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5 points

So is it just the definition of “fire” itself? Like only something burning with oxygen is “fire” but if it’s another fuel source it’s not technically “fire” but we call it fire anyway?

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9 points

Burning with oxygen is oxidation, things oxidize when the element oxygen binds with another element, which it’s very prone to doing. Oxidation with iron is rust, it just happens much more slowly (but still exothermically) than when biological compound oxidize they release energy more rapidly, rapidly enough to cause other nearby organic bonds to break and expose themselves to sites for more oxidation to take place.

There can be electrical fires, chemical fires, classic fires, and self fueling fires (the kind you were originally asking about). There are probably more categories now. Always be sure to use the proper fire extinguisher for the fire at hand.

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6 points
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I can’t find anything that says it’s not considered fire if it’s not burning with oxygen, just that a fuel needs to be oxidizing and combusting, and the definition of oxidation has expanded so it doesn’t necessarily require actual oxygen anymore (even though that’s how the word originated).

Here’s a neat clip I found of hydrogen-chlorine fire.

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3 points

There are very few things that burn without oxygen and are not self oxygenating

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0 points

The reason things don’t burn underwater is there’s no oxygen down there. So if you’re asking whether things can burn underwater? Mostly no.

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18 points

Fire is definitely possible without oxygen. Like in a chlorine atmosphere, for example.

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4 points

It’s also enhances the fire because it is a stronger oxidizing agent. Fluorine is also another strong oxidizing agent and will enhance fires dramatically

Note: Each element or chemical behaves differently with other chemicals.

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Note: Each element or chemical behaves differently with other chemicals.

Can you prove that? 😉

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1 point

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

Like in a chlorine atmosphere, for example

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

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6 points
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I mean there is some stuff that makes water flammabe. What was it again? Pretty nasty stuff, that explodes if it touches anything. It’s an acid i think?

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4 points

Fluorine? Or maybe chlorine trifluoride?

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2 points

Maybe Trichloro silane? I think it was something with “tri”, reactive with almost anything and creates a poisonous gas then.

Probably one of them, i give up.

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3 points

I think it is chlorine trifluoride, which I only know about because of Sand Won’t Save You This Time

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4 points
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You mean Sodium in water? Example attached

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2 points

Nope, but good one too.

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3 points

Any alkali metal? That’s not the water exploding, that’s the metal exploding

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1 point

No, not that.

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1 point

You mean greek fire ?

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3 points

Well technically all of the alkaline metals have pretty strong reactions when in water though to different degrees. So maybe one of them?

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2 points

Not an acid, but maybe francium?

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