| Greek fire: must be Class BWolfspirit, on host 64.229.203.47 Sunday, May 6, 2001, at 03:25:32
 Preposterous Theory posted by Fuzzpilz on Thursday, April 26, 2001, at 14:20:39:
 > > That doesn't explain it entirely.  I'm with Gahalia's original question.  Why would *water* explode a small, bubbling candlewax fire into a Nine Foot Mushroom Firecloud of Doom?> >
 > > I suppose that if it is a Class B fire, the part which is ignited (prior to the water-dumping) is the vapour-air bubble immediately above the wax.  You'd think water in a sufficient quantity should *decrease* the overall heat-energy content (of the exothermic combustion reaction) and bring it closer to going out.  Instead, the water vaporizes explosively and in fact seems to fuel the explosion.  Huh?
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 > I haven't read up on this, but here's a theory: the heat is enough to separate the oxygen and hydrogen in the water, but they immediately react with each other again, spreading the heat in said nine-foot-mushroom-of-fire, which would then be cooler than the actual oil fire.
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 > Fuzzpilz
 
 Nice theory, no cigar. :-)  The hydrogen-oxygen bonds in water are covalent linkages, meaning they are very tightly bound together.  I think I've heard that temperatures in excess of 2800°C are required to split the O-H bond.  Well, if we were persistent and tried -- purely as a thermochemical experiment -- to set my house on fire, by pouring home heating fuel down the chimney and throwing a few barrels of coal briquettes into the firebox, the hottest I could get a roaring chimney-flue fire going is about, oh, 1700-2000°C.  So unless I can get my hands on a thermonuclear explosive of some sort, :-) I'm afraid that not even a blast furnace can heat up to the necessary degree of heat required to split hydrogen away from oxygen, even when using a pure O2 atmosphere.  I think we'll have to think about it from another direction.
 
 Wolf "water fountains and a Class B chimney fire to magically create the Ninety Foot Mushroom Firecloud of Doom: FWOOOOOOOM" spirit
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