I was thinking the other day that if water is H2O shouldn't it be more flammable than anything else? Two parts Hydrogen and one part oxygen. In my book that would look like a fireball waiting to happen. But instead it puts fires out.
So I did some research (bored at work). Found out the following -
Thats interesting, I've never thought of it scientifically before. But that makes sense.Objects, such as wood have a flash point temperature at which it starts to put off vapors or gases. It is these gases that burn. As fire continues it heats up more of the object so it keeps producing gases and the fire continues. Water does not smother a fire by keeping the air away from it. Water strikes the object and cools it to below its flash point so it produces no more gases that burn and the fire will extinguish. The steam produced by the water can help put it out to a small extent. The hot steam can cause serious injury to a firefighter just as the fire can.
But this is the really interesting part -
So what is required to make water flamable?Water is burned hydrogen (H2O) and can't burn twice. Water retards fire by cooling the burning material and by separating the burning object from its oxygen supply either by wetting the object or by forming a blanket of steam around it.
Sounds like cars should have more potassium in them.Potassium can do this, and the heat generated is sufficient to ignite the hydrogen left behind (which then reacts with oxygen in the air to make water again!).
Water is a weird substance.
In theory if we ever entered a post apocalyptic world, more hydrogen would burn making more water in the process. So doesn't it sort of make sense that life on this planet will exist in some form or other for eternity as long as Earth acts as a life container?
Sorry for dribbling on.. its one of those Sundays at work
