Ferric chloride burns with a blue/green flame.
When you burn strontium chloride, you will get a red flame. Strontium compounds are known for producing bright red flames when heated.
Burning magnesium will result in a brilliant white light.
Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core and has a light red glow at the top. The colour calcium chloride burns is described as brick red.
When you burn lithium chloride, or any other lithium salt, you get a crimson flame, due to the positive lithium ions. The heat from burning the substance excites the outer electrons of the lithium ions to higher energy levels, when they drop back to the ground state, energy is released as light, and the wavelength of that light corresponding to that drop is crimson, hence we see a crimson flame.
Magnesium chloride typically burns with a white color flame.
An intense white flame is produced when magnesium burns.
Ferric chloride burns with a blue/green flame.
When you burn strontium chloride, you will get a red flame. Strontium compounds are known for producing bright red flames when heated.
Burning magnesium will result in a brilliant white light.
Strontium chloride will burn in a Bunsen burner flame to give a brick red non-luminous color.
No color. When burning chlorine, the flame gains no additional color from the chlorine. Examples of this may be found by burning Aluminum chloride or Magnesium chloride, both of which burn colorless. This means that Chlorine contributes no color to the flame.
Chloride compounds typically do not burn with a flame that has a distinct color. When chloride compounds burn, they may produce a white or colorless flame.
Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core and has a light red glow at the top. The colour calcium chloride burns is described as brick red.
When you burn lithium chloride, or any other lithium salt, you get a crimson flame, due to the positive lithium ions. The heat from burning the substance excites the outer electrons of the lithium ions to higher energy levels, when they drop back to the ground state, energy is released as light, and the wavelength of that light corresponding to that drop is crimson, hence we see a crimson flame.
You get and orange - yellow colour.
red