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5.14 Dust Can Explosion-- Lycopodium Powder Combustion ... A small amount of lycopodium powder inside the funnel. ... As an alternate method, one could simply place a sample of lycopodium powder on an asbestos pad, hold burner to it in this "compact" state, then initiate the dust can explosion...
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chemed.chem.purdue.edu/demos/main_pages/5.14.html
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The value of C=170 g/m3 exceeds the stoichiometric concentration (C=125 g/m3) for lycopodium–air combustion. Above a value of C=170 g/m3, the velocity ...
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linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0950423099000728
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However, it has not been clarified yet how independent flames could be formed and how the combustion zone moves in a lycopodium dust cloud. ...
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linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0950423000000498
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Modeling Combustion of Lycopodium Particles by Considering the Temperature Difference between the Gas and the Particles. UDC 662.612 ...
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www.maik.ru/abstract/cesw/9/cesw0278_abstract.pdf
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Key words: lycopodium particle combustion, analytical method, flame tempera- ture, burning velocity. INTRODUCTION. Dust explosions are phenomena where the ...
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www.springerlink.com/index/M13LL2J766R3H27G.pdf
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The Combustion of Lycopodium Powder. Description: Lycopodium powder is squeezed from a squirt bottle into a candle flame, and is shown to be readily ...
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www.chem.indiana.edu/community/demos/13-9CombustionofLy...
www.chem.indiana.edu/community/demos/13-9CombustionofLycopodiumPowder_001.doc
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The fuse transfers combustion from the source - a portfire or pyrotechnic igniter - to the compound inside the firework. Shop goods use Blue Touchpaper but display fireworks often have naked match, ... Lycopodium Powder This product is the spore of the plant. When aerated it can be ignited to produce a column of fire.
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www.fireworks.co.uk/abt/glossary.html
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Lycopodium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Lycopodium is a genus of clubmosses, also known as ground pines , in the family Lycopodiaceae, a family of fern-allies (see Pteridophyta). They are flowerless, vascular, terrestrial or epiphytic ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycopodium
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For this small-scale explosion, I use burning lycopodium powder to create the heat I need. I have built ... This makes for a slow combustion. If you cut the log into smaller and smaller pieces, you expose more and more of the cellulose to oxygen so more burning can take place at the same time - increased reaction rate.
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www.allatoms.com/LycoPage.htm
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