Orange flame and blue flame: what causes the difference? metal vapors?

  • Context: Undergrad 
  • Thread starter Thread starter pa5tabear
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Difference Metal
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the causes of flame color, particularly the differences between blue and orange flames observed during the heating of a carbon steel rod with a blow torch. Participants explore various theories related to photon energy, metal vaporization, and black body radiation, as well as the implications of different metal emissions on flame color.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that flame color is related to photon energy and electron transitions, with blue flames indicating higher energy than orange flames.
  • Others propose that metal atoms or clusters may be vaporized from the heated surface, emitting light at characteristic frequencies, which is a principle used in atomic emission spectroscopy.
  • One participant argues that the blue flame is due to the emission spectra of hydrocarbon radicals, while the orange color arises from iron atoms and other surface impurities.
  • Another viewpoint indicates that the orange glow is a result of black body radiation, asserting that the blue flame is hot and glows blue, while the steel glows orange due to heat transfer.
  • Some participants challenge the black body radiation explanation, stating that typical blowtorch flames do not behave as black bodies and that the blue flame is primarily due to the gas mixture's emission spectra.
  • A later reply emphasizes that different metals produce different flame colors, with specific examples such as copper and cobalt contributing distinct hues.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the causes of flame color, with no consensus reached on the primary explanation. Disagreements arise particularly around the roles of black body radiation and the emission spectra of metals.

Contextual Notes

Some claims depend on specific assumptions about the nature of flame emissions and the conditions under which the observations were made. The discussion includes unresolved aspects regarding the exact mechanisms behind flame color changes and the influence of different materials.

pa5tabear
Messages
174
Reaction score
0
What causes flame color? I know light color corresponds to photon energy which is related to electrons relaxing from a high to low energy state.

I'm not sure how to conceptualize this situation though.

My professor was heating a 0.8 wt% carbon steel rod, in austenite phase, with a blow torch until it started glowing. I assume it was still in the austenite phase.

During the heating, the flames from the blow torch were blue until the metal started glowing orange. At this most of the flames changed color to orange. There were still some blue flames at the outlet of the blow torch but those that were past the piece of metal were all orange.
 
Science news on Phys.org


it may be that metal atoms or clusters are being vaporized from the surface by the hot gas flow across it, at which point they'll start emitting light at their characteristic frequencies. this is actually an analytical technique for trace metals in organics or solutions called atomic emission spectroscopy.
 


Blue means hotter than orange flame. That is why blue stars are hotter than yellow/orange stars just like Betelgeuse (red giant) which is located in the orion constellation. The cause of the blue flame is just that is coming out really hot due to the introduction of more hydrogen or oxygen atoms (I think), you can tell by the color of the flame. Also remember from the spectrum, visible blue light has shorter wavelengths than red and thus the energy is higher. photons with shorter wavelengths have more energy than photons with longer wavelengths. That is why radio waves don't kill you, but Gamma rays and x-rays are dangerous.
 
Last edited:


chill_factor said:
it may be that metal atoms or clusters are being vaporized from the surface by the hot gas flow across it, at which point they'll start emitting light at their characteristic frequencies. this is actually an analytical technique for trace metals in organics or solutions called atomic emission spectroscopy.

I also think the orange glow is due to admixtures originated from heated steel surface. It may be any solid particles such as ferrum oxide, or may be soot. Moreover Fe atoms have a lot of emission spectral lines within the visible range, and there may be some other admixtures, such as Na atoms which have very intense orange emission lines.

Different metals give different colors to the flame. For example Cu gives green or blue color (I don't remember exactly), Co - blue, and Cr - green.
 
In this case I am pretty sure that the color of the flame is due to black body radiation. The blue flame is hot, so it glows blue. Once the hot gas passes the steel, it transfers a lot of it's heat to the steel so it is cooler and glows orange.

The flame only started glowing orange once the steel was glowing because hot air and cold air don't like to mix, so their was a thick boundary layer of cool air around the steel that prevented the flame from transferring heat efficiently.

Iron boils at 3000K which is white hot. I don't think you would see any sort of electron relaxation light until the steel got really close to that point. Carbon is even hotter.
 
The blue flame is not blue because of black-body regulation. That is a misconception.

A black body at the temperature of a typical blowtorch flame (1500-2000 C) is reddish-orange. There are no black bodies in the typical blowtorch or Bunsen burneflame, which is why it isn't reddish-orange.

The blue color of the flame comes from the emission spectra of various hydrocarbon radicals. See, for example, this spectrum.

The orange color of the flame after passing the bar probably comes from the emission spectrum of iron atoms. It doesn't take very many to produce a very bright color. If you put the bar in the oxygen-rich part of the flame, you may also get sparks as larger particles of iron burn. Of course, there is also a ton of junk on the surface of the iron bar that could provide its own color to the flame.

If the "metal emission spectrum" theory is correct, then doing it with a copper rod instead of an iron rod should produce a bluish-green flame beyond the bar (at least after all the extraneous junk has been burned away). If this happens, it can't be explained by any theory of blackbody emission, which would disprove that theory.
 
jackn007 said:
In this case I am pretty sure that the color of the flame is due to black body radiation. The blue flame is hot, so it glows blue. Once the hot gas passes the steel, it transfers a lot of it's heat to the steel so it is cooler and glows orange......

no that is incorrect

I agree with chill_factor and eigenperson on this one

the flame is initially blue primarily because that is the emission spectra of the gas/gas mixture used to create the flame any other material iron, copper etc will colour the flame according to its emission spectra

cheers
Dave
 
Last edited:

Similar threads

  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
3K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
12
Views
6K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
3K
  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
4K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
16K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 15 ·
Replies
15
Views
6K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
5K