Yes if it gets hot enough and it has enough air.
Unattended cooking oils are a leading cause of house fires in the USA.
Water is heavier then Oil, so it goes to the bottom. Once there it evaporates and pushes the oil out into the air. As the oil goes though the air it sucks in more oxygen and explodes.
A flame appears.
yes
oxygen
the properties of oil are very different from the element in oil so this makes it easy to solvee
Insulin is peptide hormone, and is moderately reduced, so theoretically, it is flammable.
Flammable gas is very dangerous gas. This gas can catch on fire and act as an accelerator causing a lot of damage.
Mineral Oil has a flash point of 170C (335F), and a boiling point of 310C (590F). By definition, "Flammable liquid" means any liquid having a flashpoint below 100 deg. F. Therefore, Mineral Oil is not a flammable liquid, however it is a Class IIIB Combustible Liquid, meaning that it will burn, but must be exposed to high heat before it will sustain a flame.
is a naturally occurring flammable liquid consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons
i think so
Bath oil is not flammable. It is a health hazard to submerge the body into any sort of flammable liquid and breath the vapors from it.
because it contains flammable liquid and oil
Vegetable oil
if you add fire it makes flammable
Usually it is. Nearly all oils are flammable.
Not all liquids are flammable. Some liquids that are flammable are gasoline, alcohol, oil. Liquids like water are not flammable.
No. If it is a latex paint, it is not flammable when its wet or dry. If its an oil paint, it is not flammable when it is dry.
yes
no its combustible!
oil is lighter than water so it on top of the water and it can burn!