How to Burn Water 🔥💦🧪 #shorts #chemistry #chemicalreaction #magic

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For how this trick is done see Chemistry Magic Trick: Light Water on Fire
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The only problem with an experiment like this is that there's a dozen different ways you could get the same result

timothykauffman
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You buying your water at the wrong store?😂

MyrvrioricoArizona
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Alcohol lined the glass and as it fills it concentrates at the top. You're just burning off the alcohol and that's why isn't goes out by itself

luckehgamingtm
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Man chemistry would have been so much harder if the teacher just showed you a demo and said ‘figure it out’ lol

Bobby-wnyr
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Fiji is located in the Pacific Ring of Fire. Since the island was formed from volcanic activity the water is naturally imbued with the essence of fire.

_flyingspaghettimonster_
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The inside of the flask is coated with a flammable liquid insoluble in water. So when the water is poured, the insoluble flammable liquid rose up to the top and ignited on fire. I guess the insoluble flammable liquid is hexane.

ExperimentoLOGY.
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You had a flammable liquid in the flask that was lighter than water, so it ignited on top of the Fiji water.

arthurneddysmith
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Nah bro, this is where sand Undertale found out where to burn water 💀💀

jeremybarrera
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I’ve heard of “you’re so bad at cooking that you can burn water”

ThatSupportiveFriend
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so this was the rain Adele was singing about

MonicaLabbao_littlemonicat
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My thoughts are the minerals in the spring water allow for a higher concentration of oxygen to dissolve in the water allowing you to ignite it temporarily.

scottlincoln
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"Hey papyrus i burnt the water"
"You cant do that"
"Oᕼ crap he did"


Sans: "see i did"

Java_on_pawz
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There is a flammable liquid that is less dense than water so it floats and it burns when ignited. Same scenarios with oil spillage on sea water, when ignited it lit up while on the ocean surface.

HowStylers
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Pentane, hexane something with a lower density than water, but not soluble in water and with a low flame point.

HackeBreitFinn
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Its not alcohol so maybe hexane or even gasoline in the flask before you put in the water. Either that or the flask is coated with a metal like sodium that would react with the water but i didnt see any bubbles cavitating from nowhere so probably gasoline or hexane. I know gasoline is lighter than water and i think hexane is as well. This would also account for the bubbles that didnt burst on the surface of the water until you lit it. Because water surface tension normally wont support the retention of gas bubbles unless adulterated with something else.

tylerdurdin
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The bottle of fiji actually contained a little amount of white oil which is not visible and when burnt it forms a yellow-orange flame and qlchol causes a blue flame

joyboy_luffy
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Now we finally know how sans burned the water

DogeAnimator
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I know how it was done, but you could also electrolize the water and ignite the flammable gasses which are generated

ironrooster
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"Hey papyrus, I burnt the water."

ScoutTFreaI
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By the colour of the flame, I would say the flask is full of methane, or heptane or other highly flamable and volatile organic solvent vapor.

ishrod_tweaks