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What is Fire? The ancient
Greeks considered fire one of the major elements in the universe, alongside water, earth and air. This grouping makes intuitive
sense: You can feel fire, just like you can feel earth, water and air. You can also see it and smell it, and you can move
it from place to place.
But fire is really something completely different. Earth, water and air are all forms of matter
-- they are made up of millions and millions of atoms collected together. Fire isn't matter at all. It's a visible, tangible side effect of matter
changing form -- it's one part of a chemical reaction.
Typically, fire comes from a chemical reaction between oxygen in the atmosphere and some sort
of fuel (wood or gasoline, for example). Of course, wood and gasoline don't spontaneously catch on fire just because they're
surrounded by oxygen. For the combustion reaction to happen, you have to heat the fuel to its ignition temperature.
Here's the sequence of events in a typical wood fire:
- Something heats the wood to a very high temperature. The heat can come from lots of different
things -- a match, focused light, friction, lightning, something else that is already burning...
- When the wood reaches about 300 degrees Fahrenheit (150 degrees Celsius), the heat decomposes
some of the cellulose material that makes up the wood.
- Some of the decomposed material is released as volatile gases. We know these gases as smoke. Smoke is compounds of hydrogen, carbon and oxygen. The rest of the material
forms char, which is nearly pure carbon, and ash, which is all of the unburnable minerals in the wood (calcium, potassium,
and so on). The char is what you buy when you buy charcoal. Charcoal is wood that has been heated to remove nearly all of
the volatile gases and leave behind the carbon. That is why a charcoal fire burns with no smoke.

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- The actual burning of wood then happens in two separate reactions:
- When the volatile gases are hot enough (about 500 degrees F (260 degrees C) for wood), the
compound molecules break apart, and the atoms recombine with the oxygen to form water, carbon dioxide and other products.
In other words, they burn.
- The carbon in the char combines with oxygen as well, and this is a much slower reaction. That
is why charcoal in a BBQ can stay hot for a long time.
A side effect
of these chemical reactions is a lot of heat. The fact that the chemical reactions in a fire generate a lot of new heat is
what sustains the fire.
Many fuels burn in one step. Gasoline is a good example. Heat vaporizes gasoline and it all
burns as a volatile gas. There is no char.
Humans have also learned how to meter out the fuel and control a fire. A candle is a tool for slowly vaporizing and burning wax.
 Photo courtesy NASA Fire forms a sphere in microgravity.
| The dangerous thing about the chemical reactions in fire is the fact that they are self-perpetuating. The heat
of the flame itself keeps the fuel at the ignition temperature, so it continues to burn as long as there is fuel and oxygen
around it. The flame heats any surrounding fuel so it releases gases as well. When the flame ignites the gases, the fire spreads.
On Earth, gravity determines how the flame burns. All the hot gases in the flame are much hotter (and less dense)
than the surrounding air, so they move upward toward lower pressure. This is why fire typically spreads upward, and it's also
why flames are always "pointed" at the top. If you were to light a fire in a microgravity environment, say onboard the space shuttle, it would form a sphere!
Fire Variables In the last section, we saw that fire is the result of a chemical reaction between two gases, typically
oxygen and a fuel gas. The fuel gas is created by heat. In other words, with heat providing the necessary energy, atoms in
one gaseous compound break their bonds with each other and recombine with available oxygen atoms in the air to form new compounds
plus lots more heat.
Only some compounds will readily break apart and recombine in this way -- the various atoms
have to be attracted to each other in the right manner. For example, when you boil water, it takes the gaseous form of steam,
but this gas doesn't react with oxygen in the air. There isn't a strong enough attraction between the two hydrogen atoms and
one oxygen atom in a water molecule and the two oxygen atoms in an oxygen molecule, so the water compound doesn't break apart
and recombine.
The most flammable compounds contain carbon and hydrogen, which recombine with oxygen relatively
easily to form carbon dioxide, water and other gases.
Different flammable fuels catch fire at different temperatures. It takes a certain amount of
heat energy to change any particular material into a gas, and even more heat energy to trigger the reaction with oxygen. The
necessary heat level varies depending on the nature of the molecules that make up the fuel. A fuel's piloted ignition temperature
is the heat level required to form a gas that will ignite when exposed to a spark. At the unpiloted ignition temperature,
which is much higher, the fuel ignites without a spark.
The fuel's size also affects how easily it will catch fire. A larger fuel, such as a thick
tree, can absorb a lot of heat, so it takes a lot more energy to raise any particular piece to the ignition temperature. A
toothpick catches fire more easily because it heats up very quickly.
A fuel's heat production depends on how much energy the gases release in the combustion reaction
and how quickly the fuel burns. Both factors largely depend on the fuel's composition. Some compounds react with oxygen in
such a way that there is a lot of "extra heat energy" left over. Others emit a smaller amount of energy. Similarly, the fuel's
reaction with oxygen may happen very quickly, or it may happen more slowly.
The fuel's shape also affects burning speed. Thin pieces of fuel burn more quickly than larger
pieces because a larger proportion of their mass is exposed to oxygen at any moment. For example, you could burn up a pile
of wood splinters or paper much more quickly than you could a block of wood with the same mass, because splinters and paper
have a much greater surface area.
In this way, fires from different fuels are like different species of animal -- they all behave
a little differently. Experts can often figure out how a fire started by observing how it affected the surrounding areas.
A fire from a fast-burning fuel that produces a lot of heat will inflict a different sort of damage than a slow-burning, low-heat
fire.
The Fire Triangle
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For fire to exist, the following four elements
must be present at the same time:
- Enough oxygen to sustain combustion,
- Enough heat to raise the material to its ignition temperature,
- Some sort of fuel or combustible material, and
- The chemical reaction that is fire.
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