What burns hotter than napalm?

Thermite, a mixture of metal powder and metal oxide, is the hottest burning man-made substance in the world.
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What chemical burns the hottest?

Acetylene and pure oxygen burns blue, at over 3,400ºC – the hottest temperature readily achievable with fuel and flame. That's hot enough to melt tungsten, which has the highest melting point of any element.
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How hot can napalm burn?

Napalm burns at temperatures ranging from 800 to 1,200 °C (1,470 to 2,190 °F). In addition, it burns longer than gasoline, is more easily dispersed, and sticks to its targets. These traits make it effective and controversial.
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Does napalm burn hotter than gasoline?

Napalm burns at the same temperature as the flammable liquid used in its composition, typically gasoline, kerosene, diesel fuel, or benzene.
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What's worse napalm or white phosphorus?

As a former Artillery Officer and have been around WP munitions, called for and fired a few of them, it all comes down to something very easy to understand: White Phosphorus STARTS fires while Napalm is DELIVERED FIRE and FLAME.
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Napalm: The Horrific, Banned Weapon... That's Still in Use Today



Does napalm melt skin?

For such a simple thing to make, napalm had horrific human consequences. A bit of liquid fire, a sort of jellied gasoline, napalm clung to human skin on contact and melted off the flesh.
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Is phosphorus illegal in war?

While they can be used on battlefields, they cannot be used in civilian areas. Phosphorus bombs contain a mixture of white phosphorus – which is not banned as a chemical weapon under international conventions – and rubber and can either be used as incendiary weapons or to create smoke screens.
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Can napalm burn underwater?

Versions of napalm B containing white phosphorus will even burn underwater (if there is trapped oxygen in folds of cloth, for example) so even jumping into rivers and lakes won't help those unfortunate souls attacked with this vile weapon.
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What happens if you light napalm on fire?

Burning napalm would set peoples' clothing on fire and produce 4th or 5th degree burns penetrating right through the skin. It came into combat use in the Korean War and even though it has been used by many countries in different conflicts since then, it is imperishably associated with the Vietnam War.
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Is thermite worse than white phosphorus?

One of the materials often confused with white phosphorus is thermite, Cranny Evans said. Like white phosphorus, thermite burns at very high temperatures — but does not produce as much smoke and is used solely for creating fires.
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Does napalm burn to the bone?

First, second and third-degree burns involve heat damage to the skin only. But now, napalm causes burns even more severe than that: a fourth-degree burn entails damage to the skin and muscle, and fifth-degree burns is a napalm wound penetrating both skin and muscle and affecting the bone.
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Does napalm burn trees?

The old napalm had merely thrown out a column of quickly extinguished flame. The new napalm used in Vietnam, which could be spread by flamethrowers or dropped from jets, spread out quickly, stuck to surfaces--trees, bamboo huts, clothing, skin--and continued burning.
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Is making napalm a war crime?

Napalm is legal to use on the battlefield under international law. Its use against "concentrations of civilians" is a war crime.
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How hot is super thermite?

Thermite, which is a mix of iron oxide rust and aluminum powder, burns at 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Gaither was able to source high-grade lab-level powder for his experiment, and he blames how pure the powder was for how fast it burned.
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What is the hottest thing ever made?

A CERN experiment at the Large Hadron Collider created the highest recorded temperature ever when it reached 9.9 trillion degrees Fahrenheit. The experiment was meant to make a primordial goop called a quark–gluon plasma behave like a frictionless fluid. That's more than 366,000 times hotter than the center of the Sun.
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What temperature will burn you instantly?

Studies show that a temperature of 52 degrees C (125 degrees F) can cause a full-thickness skin burn in 2 minutes and a temperature of 54 degrees C (130 degrees F) can result in a full-thickness skin burn in 30 seconds.
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Is napalm just gasoline and styrofoam?

During the Vietnam war, a new napalm was developed called 'Napalm-B' which used polystyrene, gasoline (petrol) and benzene (already in gasoline). The new napalm was a lot more effective than the old type and the polystyrene used to thicken the gasoline made the substance even more sticky and harder to put out.
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What is a nape bomb?

noun. chemistry. a bomb made from a thick and highly incendiary liquid, usually consisting of petrol gelled with aluminium soaps, used in firebombs, flame-throwers, etc.
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What does napalm smell like?

It smells like … victory.” I asked a Vietnam vet if he could recall what napalm actually smelled like. He responded instantly, “Gasoline and laundry detergent.. It smells like what it is.
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Why is napalm no longer used?

A 1980 UN convention banned the use against civilian targets of napalm, a terrifying mixture of jet fuel and polystyrene that sticks to skin as it burns. The US, which did not sign the treaty, is one of the few countries that makes use of the weapon.
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Is napalm sticky fire?

Napalm, invented by Fieser in 1942, is an incendiary substance made by the simple procedure of adding a "gelling" powder, composed of naphthalene and palmitate (hence "napalm"), to gasoline in varying concentrations to form a sticky, combustible substance.
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What does napalm do when it hits the ground?

It clings to whatever it touches, creating a large, hotly burning area around the target. This feature also decreases the need for accuracy when dropping napalm bombs. U.S. and German forces used a precursor to napalm in flamethrowers during World War I.
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Will the US run out of phosphorus?

Phosphorus Solutions. Eliminating depletion and environmental damage with efficient phosphorus use and reuse. Earth's phosphorus is being depleted at an alarming rate. At current consumption levels, we will run out of known phosphorus reserves in around 80 years, but consumption will not stay at current levels.
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What does white phosphorus do to humans?

White phosphorus causes severely painful, partial (second degree) to full thickness (third degree) burns, which have a characteristic yellow color and garlic-like odor. Smoke may release from the burn site from the continued burning of white phosphorus or the formation of phosphoric acid.
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When did the US stop using white phosphorus?

White phosphorus smoke screens were fired by the U.S. Army in November 2004 on the outskirts of Fallujah, Iraq.
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