Saeviomagy
Adventurer
MarauderX said:
Again, my point is that the cup does not catch fire because of it's absorptivity, and has nothing to do with heat transfer and everything to do with the properties of flammability of the contents. A paper cup holds water how? Once filled, water molecules soak into the fibers of the paper, and the paper expands slightly, sealing in water better than if it contracted. If you let the paper cup sit for hours you will see the cup leaking. No, it is not condensation, and you can try it with room temperature water.
What is happening with the cup under the bunsen burner then? The heat is being transferred to the water via conductance and radiance, yes; but by no means does this have anything to do with the flammability of the cup but the flammability of the water in the paper fibers, of which happens to be nil. If you boiled the water in the cup, the cup will still not ignite. If you sealed the cup and produced steam in the cup, the heat will drive the steam upwards until the bottom is dry enough for the fire to catch.
"Dude, you are so wrong! I saw it happen, man, I was there!"
That's great, I'm sure it did, and perhaps that's the logic of your teacher, but I'm glad I studied the mechanics of materials and heat transfer a little better than him/her. Next time, ask your teacher to fill a cheap plastic container (not heat resistant) with water and try the same trick. The water may prevent the plastic from getting hot for a little bit, but the plastic will certainly melt before the water boils. Why didn't the water absorb the heat then?
edit: Sorry, don't mean to hijack the thread, but I feel like I have to defend RL physics a bit.
You're flat-out wrong.
Think hard. Why is wet paper not flammable? Is the paper still there? Yes. So why is it suddenly not burning? Because there's some water nearby? What does that have to do with it?
What spectacular property does water have that it stops chemical reactions in molecules near it?
What is happening when the wet cup gets heated?
The water turns to steam. You said so yourself.
What do you suppose is required to turn water into steam. I'll tell you - heat.
If that heat is turning water into steam, then it's no longer available to ignite the paper cup.
Furthermore, the act of water turning to steam uses up more energy than raising the temperature of the water from 99 to 100 degrees.
Additionally, the evaporating water takes some of the heat with it.
I would expect that if this experiment doesn't work in a plastic container, then it is due to one or both of the following factors:
1. Plastic is a good insulator, and in the average plastic container, theres significantly more plastic between the heat source and the water than with the paper container.
2. The melting point of the plastic in question is lower than the boiling point of water.
Given that this principle is widely known and applied (ever wondered what a heatsink is for?), I think you may want to hit your physics books a bit more.
Also Conaill - your examples don't work because of the amount of air. It works because of the temperature that the material can be raised to. If you take a 1kg block of iron, and file it into a powder, then the amount of energy required to ignite all of it is still the same as the amount of energy required to ignite it when it was a block. The real difference is that the iron as a powder cannot conduct heat away quickly - instead of heating the entire iron block, you heat only the parts exposed to flame, and they therefore get much hotter, then reach their activation point and start combusting. The combusting iron then applies heat to the powder nearest it etc. While it is true that starving a reaction of oxygen will cause it to fail, starving a reaction of heat will cause the same thing.