It is thought the GCSE pupil got too close to a Bunsen burner or burning taper. |
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So Paul emptied the sand-filled red fire bucket, threw in some potatoes, vegetables and meat, and cooked a stew over a Bunsen burner. |
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Brown's tinkering with his side was experimental, and as successful as setting fire to the lab curtains with a Bunsen burner. |
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The sparks generated by striking steel against a flint provide the activation energy to initiate combustion in this Bunsen burner. |
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This experiment involved a Bunsen burner, glass beakers, and a chemical, among other things. |
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The students learnt how to heat little copper pellets in a spoon over a Bunsen burner until they melted. |
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One of the most commonly used pieces of equipment for heating in a laboratory, a Bunsen burner uses natural gas as a fuel supply. |
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One day in chemistry class, a few of us took a silver dollar and heated it over a Bunsen burner until it almost glowed. |
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But it is a common misconception that Robert Bunsen invented the Bunsen burner. |
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The capillary tip was sealed using a Bunsen burner such that the distal end of Pt wire was straight in the tubing. |
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The Earth is a vibrant blue, the kind of blue you see when looking at a Bunsen burner. |
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Preliminary attempts were made to ignite MPET-covered insulation blankets with a Bunsen burner as an ignition source. |
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To avoid this, the sulfuric acid is evaporated almost to dryness in the digestion flask over the flame of a Bunsen burner. |
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When the rod is attracted by the magnet, it enters a space just above the flame of a Bunsen burner but only stays there a short while. |
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To better understand the energy recovery process, consider the smoke coming off a burning object and then ignite the smoke with a Bunsen burner. |
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The flammability test used to certify PET-covered insulation blankets was the vertical Bunsen burner test. |
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Sterile additives can be added via the open port with the help of a Bunsen burner or via a silicone septum using a syringe. |
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Other arcs were created by exposing the insulated conductors to burning aircraft materials and then applying a direct flame source, using a Bunsen burner, to simulate arcs created in a fire environment. |
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This test involved suspending a strip of insulation material vertically over a Bunsen burner, applying a flame for 12 seconds and then removing the flame. |
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For the majority of materials used in the pressure vessel, the flammability tests in place at the time the Boeing 767 was certified consisted primarily of a variety of Bunsen burner tests. |
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Certain materials only required the horizontal Bunsen burner test. |
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An economical Bunsen burner for natural gas. |
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It's an experiment as much as any kind of chemical experiment that you do in school over a Bunsen burner with a blue flame, with the possibility of blowing up and shattering glass everywhere. |
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Around this time the Bunsen burner was in use along with some forms of electricity. |
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The Welsbach was based on the idea of the Bunsen burner, still using gas, a cotton mesh with cerium and thorium was imbedded into the Welsbach. |
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Her blue eyes shine like they've been borrowed from a Bunsen burner. |
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The Bunsen burner was also of importance in the study of flame structure. |
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A flower lies on a piece of aerogel and is heated with a Bunsen burner. |
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Faraday invented an early form of what was to become the Bunsen burner, which is in practical use in science laboratories around the world as a convenient source of heat. |
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