Why is it that sometimes smoke is wispy, like after you’ve blown out a candle and sometimes cloudy, like steam from an iron?

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Why is it that sometimes smoke is wispy, like after you’ve blown out a candle and sometimes cloudy, like steam from an iron?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

It often depends on the water content of the fuel. A candle burns paraffin, there’s no water. But often the fire is using much of its energy to dry out the moisture content of the fuel before the fuel will burn. Think about adding green branches to a fire and getting smoke. A lot of that smoke is actually steam.

Anonymous 0 Comments

If whatever is burning has water in it it will give off smoke.

For example wood can take months to fully dry out, and it’s very absorbent. If you burn very dry wood it will be wispy and give off black or dark grey smoke. If it’s very wet it will be a mix of that smoke and steam.

The crackle of a fire is actually little droplets of water rapidly vaporizing, for example.