If you turn it to the "Roaring Blue Flame" you should see a small blue cone within the actual flame, the hottest part is actually just above that cone, contrary to common mistake that it is inside the "blue cone". The blue cone is just the gas that has not been ignited yet.
The tip of the blue cone is the hottest part of the Bunsen burner flame.
hottest part of flame
The hottest part is where the flame is light blue or blue; which gradually turns to yellow as the flame is cooled by the colder outer air. When the safety flame (yellow) is on, the hottest point is the tip of this flame.
the hottist part is the rouring flame and the light blue bit inside is the hottist the top of it
The hottest part is the internal flame triangle in the blue flame (roaring blue flame) - up to 700 0C.
Near the tip of a blue flame is the hottest.
In the fire
The tip of the blue cone is the hottest part of the Bunsen burner flame.
hottest part of flame
in bunsen burner complete combustion takes place,it produces blue flame and blue region is the hottest part of a flame.so the whole flame is very hot,either the outermost part of flame.
The blue part of the flame, the cone in the middle is the hottest, the flame cools as it gets further away from the burning centre, this is similar to the sun where the outer surface of the sun is significantly cooler compared to the inside.
The hottest part is where the flame is light blue or blue; which gradually turns to yellow as the flame is cooled by the colder outer air. When the safety flame (yellow) is on, the hottest point is the tip of this flame.
the hottist part is the rouring flame and the light blue bit inside is the hottist the top of it
The hottest part is the internal flame triangle in the blue flame (roaring blue flame) - up to 700 0C.
No, the blue part is the hottest. In fact, you should adjust the burner so that you only have a blue flame. A yellow/orange/red flame is indicative of incomplete combustion (generating carbon monoxide).
When set to a roaring flame, there are what looks like cones of different shades of blue and orange. The hottest part of the flame, when set to roaring, is at the tip of the blue cone.
A properly adjusted flame on a bunsen burner would have a flame that is blue. It would also appear that there is a lighter blue flame in the center, usually referred to as an inner blue cone, the hottest part of the flame.