Is fire a solid, a liquid, or a gas? - Elizabeth Cox

2,512,253 views ・ 2018-11-05

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Sitting around a campfire, you can feel its heat,
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smell the woody smoke, and hear it crackle.
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If you get too close,
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it burns your eyes and stings your nostrils.
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You could stare at the bright flames forever
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as they twist and flicker in endless incarnations.
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But what exactly are you looking at?
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The flames are obviously not solid,
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nor are they liquid.
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Mingling with the air, they’re more like a gas,
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but more visible--and more fleeting.
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And on a scientific level, fire differs from gas
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because gases can exist in the same state indefinitely
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while fires always burn out eventually.
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One misconception is that fire is a plasma,
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the fourth state of matter in which atoms
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are stripped of their electrons.
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Like fire and unlike the other kinds of matter,
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plasmas don’t exist in a stable state on earth.
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They only form when gas is exposed to an electric field or superheated
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to temperatures of thousands or tens of thousands of degrees.
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By contrast, fuels like wood and paper burn
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at a few hundred degrees —far below the
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threshold of what's usually considered a plasma.
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So if fire isn’t a solid, liquid, gas,
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or a plasma, what does that leave?
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It turns out fire isn’t actually matter at all.
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Instead, it’s our sensory experience of a chemical reaction called combustion.
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In a way, fire is like the leaves changing color in fall,
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the smell of fruit as it ripens,
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or a firefly’s blinking light.
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All of these are sensory clues that a
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chemical reaction is taking place.
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What differs about fire is that it engages a lot of
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our senses at the same time, creating the kind of vivid
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experience we expect to come from a physical thing.
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Combustion creates that sensory experience
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using fuel, heat, and oxygen.
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In a campfire, when the logs are heated to their ignition temperature,
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the walls of their cells decompose,
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releasing sugars and other molecules into the air.
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These molecules then react with airborne oxygen
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to create carbon dioxide and water.
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At the same time, any trapped water in the logs
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vaporizes, expands, ruptures the wood around it,
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and escapes with a satisfying crackle.
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As the fire heats up, the carbon dioxide and water vapor
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created by combustion expand.
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Now that they’re less dense, they rise in a thinning column.
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Gravity causes this expansion and rising, which gives
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flames their characteristic taper.
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Without gravity, molecules don’t separate
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by density and the flames have a totally different shape.
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We can see all of this because combustion
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also generates light.
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Molecules emit light when heated,
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and the color of the light depends
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on the temperature of the molecules.
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The hottest flames are white or blue.
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The type of molecules in a fire can
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also influence flame color.
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For instance, any unreacted carbon atoms from the logs
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form little clumps of soot that rise
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into the flames and emit the yellow-orange
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light we associate with a campfire.
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Substances like copper, calcium chloride,
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and potassium chloride can add their
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own characteristic hues to the mix.
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Besides colorful flames,
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fire also continues to generate heat as it burns.
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This heat sustains the flames by keeping
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the fuel at or above ignition temperature.
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Eventually, though, even the hottest fires
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run out of fuel or oxygen.
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Then, those twisting flames give a final hiss
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and disappear with a wisp of smoke
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as if they were never there at all.
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