The lowest temperature at which a liquid gives off enough vapors to form a flammable mixture with air
The temperature at which a liquid will yield enough flamable vapour to ignite There are various recognized industrial testing methods; therefore the method used must be stated
The lowest temperature at which a liquid gives off enough flammable vapor to ignite and produce a flame when an ignition source is present
means the minimum temperature at which a liquid within a container gives off vapour in sufficient concentration to form an ignitable mixture with air near the surface of the liquid (Ontario Fire Code 1996)
The temperature at which a liquid gives off vapor sufficient to form an ignitable mixture with air
The Flash Point is the lowest temperature at which a liquid or a solid gives off enough vapor to form flammable air-vapor mixture near its surface The lower the flash point, the greater the fire hazard The flash point is an approximate value and should not be taken as a sharp dividing line between safe and hazardous conditions The flash point is determined by a variety of test methods which give different results Two of these methods are abbreviated as OC (open cup) and CC (closed cup)
Temperature at which a liquid will give off enough flammable vapor to ignite There are several flash point test methods, and flash points may vary for the same material depending on the method used, so the test method is indicated when the flash point is given
The minimum temperature at which a flammable-vapor mixture exists at the surface of a liquid
The temperature to which a combustible liquid must be heated to give off sufficient vapor to form momentarily a flammable mixture with air when a small flame is applied under specified conditions (ASTM Designation D 92 )
The temperature at which a liquid or volatile solid gives off vapor sufficient to form an ignitable mixture near the surface of the liquid or within the test vessel
the temperature at which a substance will ignite when an open flame is passed over it
lowest temperature at which a substance produces vapors that ignite immediately when subjected to a flame (Chemistry); critical point that causes change; situation that will likely become violent
the lowest temperature at which a flammable liquid will produce a combustible vapor that will burn in the presence of a flame, under certain prescribed conditions of test
The lowest temperature at which a good produces enough vapour to form a flammable mixture with air
the lowest temperature at which the vapor of a combustible liquid can be ignited in air
The lowest temperature at which a liquid gives off enough vapor to form an ignitable mixture and burn when a source of ignition (sparks, open flames, etc ) is present Two tests are used to determine the flash point: open cup and closed cup The test method is indicated on the MSDS after the flash point
That temperature at which a liquid or solid will begin to burn when exposed to a source of ignition (spark or flame)
The lowest temperature at which a solvent will generate sufficient vapors to ignite in the presence of flame
The lowest temperature at which sufficient vapor is produced to cause combustion if an ignition source is present
the lowest temperature at which the vapor of a combustible liquid can be ignited in air point at which something is ready to blow up
The lowest temperature of a liquid material at which combustion will occur when air reaches its surface
of a chemical - The lowest temperature at which a flame will propagate through the vapour of a combustible material to the liquid surface It is determined by the vapour pressure of the liquid, since only when a sufficiently high vapour concentration is reached, can it support combustion It should be noted that the source of ignition need not be an open flame, but could equally be, for example, the surface of a hot plate, or a steam pipe
The minimum temperature at which a liquid gives off a vapor in sufficient concentration to ignite when tested by any of the measurement methods described in the definition of flashpoint in the Safety and Health Core Rules, WAC 296-800-370
the lowest temperature of a liquid at which it gives off enough vapor to form an ignitable mixture of vapor and air immediately above the liquid surface
is the minimum temperature at which a liquid gives off a sufficient vapor to reach 100% LEL (sufficient vapor to form an ignitable mixture with the air near the surface of the liquid)
the minimum temperature at wMeb, under specified test conditions, a substance emits sufficient flammable gas to ignite momentarily on application of an ignition source
The minimum temperature at which a liquid gives off vapor in sufficient concentration to form an ignitable mixture with air near the surface of the liquid At this temperature the liquid does not give off sufficient vapor to sustain combustion
A flashpoint is a place which people think is dangerous because political trouble may start there and then spread to other towns or countries. The more serious flashpoints are outside the capital
A flashpoint is the moment at which a conflict, especially a political conflict, suddenly gets worse and becomes violent. The immediate flashpoint was Wednesday's big rally in the city centre
{i} lowest temperature at which the steam of a flammable liquid can be made to briefly ignite in air (Chemistry); critical point, point when something is ready to explode
Is a Markpoint Printer File Manager for the Printer Flash memory and is used to load the printer with new typefaces, logos, new software upgrades and new application programs