Fiji is located in the Pacific Ring of Fire. Since the island was formed from volcanic activity the water is naturally imbued with the essence of fire.
No, you could hear the pop of the top coming off when he twisted it now what he could’ve done was coat the inside of the flask with C3H8O, and since isopropyl alcohol is less dense than water, it floats to the top
The inside of the flask is coated with a flammable liquid insoluble in water. So when the water is poured, the insoluble flammable liquid rose up to the top and ignited on fire. I guess the insoluble flammable liquid is hexane.
Its not alcohol so maybe hexane or even gasoline in the flask before you put in the water. Either that or the flask is coated with a metal like sodium that would react with the water but i didnt see any bubbles cavitating from nowhere so probably gasoline or hexane. I know gasoline is lighter than water and i think hexane is as well. This would also account for the bubbles that didnt burst on the surface of the water until you lit it. Because water surface tension normally wont support the retention of gas bubbles unless adulterated with something else.
The bubbles in the brew carry some flammable substance to the top of the flask, and it stays lighted with flame until the flammable is gone or the bubbles carrying the flammable is gone.
You did something called: Lying. It's when you knowingly make a claim which is untrue. See, when you made the title for this video, you lied about what was being burned. The "water" was not being burned, something flammable was, very obviously. That is how you did it. You lied, for personal gain, to clickbait us into watching and typing comments about how you lied, and ultimately it is a massive waste of collective human life, but that doesn't matter, because you've convinced yourself that making lying clickbait titles for youtube videos is not too immoral for you. Did i solve it?
@@emerybryanthe didn’t lie per se, he just coated the flask in heptane. It’s nonpolar so it won’t mix with the water, and floats on it. The fiji was still real. Original commenter has no idea what they’re talking about lol
Something in the vial... something in the bottle... could be a dozen things, and inside those dozen ways there could be hundreds of chemicals that would give the same effect.
There is a flammable liquid that is less dense than water so it floats and it burns when ignited. Same scenarios with oil spillage on sea water, when ignited it lit up while on the ocean surface.
Uhh (insert name here) I burned the water (Insert name here) How the f**k did the water burn? Oh uhh I don't know How did the f**k did you burn the water (insert name here)? Just stop it😭 No I won't stop you! The house is already on fire! You are not a COOKER. NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
The water in the bottle IS the alcohol. That's why he fills it to the top. So the only surface area of alcohol that's exposed is small, creating just a teeny flame when lit.
Prob rim lined with ISOp, or the Fiji is refilled with dilute ISOp. Maybe alcohol lined glass before pouring water in? I think that'd be too little tho, but maybe not if it's lighter than water.
You've put a bit of gasoline in the flask and spread it evenly, since gasoline floats on water the small ammount of gasoline floats up and can be set alight.
The bottle of fiji actually contained a little amount of white oil which is not visible and when burnt it forms a yellow-orange flame and qlchol causes a blue flame
I don't know how you did it, but turning the beaker upside down was pointless given that the rest of the video was spliced in directly after you set it back down.
Hydrogen in the flask? wouldn't pour out when you flip it over because its lighter than air. However there may have been just enough time to fill the flask and light the bit of gas left at the top before it went out? Solution was prob posted but I wanna guess!
I can tell by the viscosity and sound of the liquid that is not pure water, not tap water for the sake of it. It's most probably mixed with some alcohol. It even formed a stable foam in the ring of the Erlenmeyer flask
You had some kind of liquid accelerant lining the flask. When you put the water in, it was heavier than the fuel so the fuel rose to the top and that’s what ignited.
Think the funniest take-away from this was that a lot of people think "alcohol" means vodka or beer, but there's different types of "water", like Fiji :DDDD
Probably a small amount of oil on the bottom, not enough to really run out of the jar when you flipped it over real quick like that, but oil is lighter than water or something I can't remember so when you mix it it sits on top
I used to gamble at Aria and people would demand Fiji water. I don't trust bottle water of any kind after I saw a movie they put something in the water bottle knowing he would take the healthy choice over a soda.
It wasn't Fiji water. You used tap water with a fracking oil rig nearby. Burning tap water is a thing. You just filled a Fiji water bottle with that stuff
The water is a paid actor
😂😂😂
@@TommyTechnetium😢😢😢🐮🐽
clearly funded by george soros
😅
I saw that fucker on the grassy knoll! I swear! I'm not trying to distract from a more sinister type of skullduggery!
The only problem with an experiment like this is that there's a dozen different ways you could get the same result
Really
Methane, alcohol
@@Light-lampyes true
why do bro sound like dat
@@MrTramaine1978 pov: you've never spoken with a single person irl
Alcohol lined the glass and as it fills it concentrates at the top. You're just burning off the alcohol and that's why isn't goes out by itself
See the full explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
See the full explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
@@TommyTechnetium 2 times copy paste for the algorythm i guess
@@vit8219 Ugh. Sometimes my phone/internet messes up
@@TommyTechnetium k.
Man chemistry would have been so much harder if the teacher just showed you a demo and said ‘figure it out’ lol
Well welcome to being a scientist 😂😂😂😂😂
😂👍👍
That is exactly how they taught chemistry, back in my h.s. days🤷♀️💁♀️
That's how my teachers taught us chemistry we have to figure out everything by ourselves 🥲
Accurate @@user-lu6yg3vk9z
Fiji is located in the Pacific Ring of Fire. Since the island was formed from volcanic activity the water is naturally imbued with the essence of fire.
Lol
😂 👌
Wrong answers only
The young and flat earth answer 😂
dude , you forgot your tin foil hat on mars
You had a flammable liquid in the flask that was lighter than water, so it ignited on top of the Fiji water.
Nice!
Bro is it alcohol
@@itscooldawg_420cant be alcohol, it's polar and would mix with the water. It has to be none polar like heptane the actual answer
No, you could hear the pop of the top coming off when he twisted it now what he could’ve done was coat the inside of the flask with C3H8O, and since isopropyl alcohol is less dense than water, it floats to the top
@@itscooldawg_420 it is water not alcohol, read the bottom of the fiji sign before you comment.
You buying your water at the wrong store?😂
I’ve heard of “you’re so bad at cooking that you can burn water”
The inside of the flask is coated with a flammable liquid insoluble in water. So when the water is poured, the insoluble flammable liquid rose up to the top and ignited on fire. I guess the insoluble flammable liquid is hexane.
Perfect!!!
I would have guessed sth stickier like dodecane
"Hey papyrus i burnt the water"
"You cant do that"
"Oᕼ crap he did"
Sans: "see i did"
Nah bro, this is where sand Undertale found out where to burn water 💀💀
"Hey bro... I just burned water"
"HOW TF DID YOU BURN THE WATER JOSH"
Edit: Holy moly guys thanks for 34 likes is my record
"uhh, papyrus I burnt the water.."
Sans how the *encounter sound* did you burn the water?
I don't know bro it just caught on fire
Sans! oh my god,
The house is on fire!
@@gobblegobble2071 I'M SORRY I CAN'T COOK.
@@orngekitte1
FUUUUU--
"Papyrus i burnt the water"
"Sans how the fuck did u burnt the water"
I was gonna comment this i am to late
Idk bro it caught on fire
Now we finally know how sans burned the water
“Uh hey papyrus i burned the water-“
*17 driverless firetrucks come driving and extinguish the house*
@@Enbianbunbuns ty-
Papyrus, I burnt the water.
"uhh..hey papyrus..i burnt the water."
"SANS HOW THE FCK DID YOU BURN THE WATER?"
a meme.
You just burned ethanol
"UHH, PAPYRUS.. I BURT THE WATER. "
Sans how tf did you burn the water
I dont know us just caught on fire
Magic.
How are you?
@@user-hc3oz8wh4iI'm good, how are you?
@@metal_1398 leave please. Btw love the pfp pic
Not how are you.
But who are you?
@@HPMICHAEL I am Metal_, it shows my name right there. Pay attention.
It's because you left a part out which is the flammable part in the glass is very light floating to the top while the H2o flats to the bottom 👍.
"Hey papyrus, I burnt the water."
"sans how the fuck did you burn the water?"
@@PedramDoesStuff198455 " I don't know bro it just set on fire"
@@jeffyonvr "SANS OH MY GOD!!! THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE!"
@@PedramDoesStuff198455 I'm sorry papyrus I can't cook
@@jeffyonvr "FUUUUU"
rims of the flasks are precovered with alcohol?
Flame wrong color
See the full explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
@@Matt-dc8lp thank you Matt
Again alcohol burns clean not yellowish orange. Would evaporated by time he puts the water in as well.
@@wenchfisterxalcohol isn't a molecule 😭 it's a category like alkanes and alkenes.
He can now run his car on fiji water😂
Fiji water Molotov that’s the only thing I’m thinking about right now lol
Its not alcohol so maybe hexane or even gasoline in the flask before you put in the water. Either that or the flask is coated with a metal like sodium that would react with the water but i didnt see any bubbles cavitating from nowhere so probably gasoline or hexane. I know gasoline is lighter than water and i think hexane is as well. This would also account for the bubbles that didnt burst on the surface of the water until you lit it. Because water surface tension normally wont support the retention of gas bubbles unless adulterated with something else.
It's hexane. Great thinking!
Butane?
@@JCR43221 hexane!
As a third grader, who does not do science yet, I absolutely do not know
see this is a rare experiment because it melted my phucking brain
Pentane, hexane something with a lower density than water, but not soluble in water and with a low flame point.
The bubbles in the brew carry some flammable substance to the top of the flask, and it stays lighted with flame until the flammable is gone or the bubbles carrying the flammable is gone.
You did something called: Lying. It's when you knowingly make a claim which is untrue. See, when you made the title for this video, you lied about what was being burned. The "water" was not being burned, something flammable was, very obviously. That is how you did it. You lied, for personal gain, to clickbait us into watching and typing comments about how you lied, and ultimately it is a massive waste of collective human life, but that doesn't matter, because you've convinced yourself that making lying clickbait titles for youtube videos is not too immoral for you. Did i solve it?
You are correct that I lied. For the solution, see th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
@@TommyTechnetiumTH-cam did away with clickable links in shorts comments sections. You should put that link in the description.
@@TommyTechnetiumso. you admit to clickbait but expect us to watch more? 🤨
its not like he murdered someone calm down
@@emerybryanthe didn’t lie per se, he just coated the flask in heptane. It’s nonpolar so it won’t mix with the water, and floats on it. The fiji was still real. Original commenter has no idea what they’re talking about lol
Im completely stumped 🤔
See the explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
If I know my Chemistry, you used a lighter to ignite a flammable substance. Oh yea FIJI is an acronym for Fire In Jar Ignite
Hexane - just a tiny amount in the inverted flask prior to adding water
The bubbles were made out of some type of flammable liquid at the top?
Indeed!
See how to do this experiment here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
Its not an empty.flask
True...
See the full explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
yes there is air inside
Something in the vial... something in the bottle... could be a dozen things, and inside those dozen ways there could be hundreds of chemicals that would give the same effect.
Here's specifically how I did it th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
mineral water may have methane dissolved in it... Opening the bottle slowly releases the gas.
This is an easy one. Alchemy and witchcraft. 🤷🏻♂️
I’m crying!
I just came here so that I could say "Mom, I burned the water..."
You put Oil (ligher than water) in the flask, and then poured the water, which the oil floated to the top, and you light the oil, not the water
Nice! See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
Some flammable oily substance on the inside of the flask so when water pours it floats to the top and you light it 🤷🏻♂️
Nice! See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
Something generate the HYODROGEN? but it will explode it thats the case,tell us sensei
See the explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
A nonpolar combustible hydrocarbon that floats to the top and is burned
You added 1/2 mL hexane to the 'empty flask'.
There is a flammable liquid that is less dense than water so it floats and it burns when ignited. Same scenarios with oil spillage on sea water, when ignited it lit up while on the ocean surface.
Nice! See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
You're some kinda wizard!
Uhh (insert name here) I burned the water
(Insert name here) How the f**k did the water burn?
Oh uhh I don't know
How did the f**k did you burn the water (insert name here)?
Just stop it😭
No I won't stop you! The house is already on fire! You are not a COOKER.
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Bro gonna kill me 💀💀💀
The water in the bottle IS the alcohol. That's why he fills it to the top. So the only surface area of alcohol that's exposed is small, creating just a teeny flame when lit.
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
This is actually the reason why the bloodhound gang didn’t need water and wanted the m-----r to burn
Did you put another chemical that doesn't mix with water first?
Coat the interior with something flammable and low density
“papyrus i burnt the water”
Prob rim lined with ISOp, or the Fiji is refilled with dilute ISOp. Maybe alcohol lined glass before pouring water in? I think that'd be too little tho, but maybe not if it's lighter than water.
Good guessing! See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
The lighter was hot enough to start a self sustaining reaction where the hydrogen and oxygen separates and keeps the fire ignited
Science is being dumb in a smart way, and I love it
very easy, you poured water in the flask and sacrificed 9 lives to summon a spirit to set water on firee
😂
It's Vodka Isn't it 😂
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
You've put a bit of gasoline in the flask and spread it evenly, since gasoline floats on water the small ammount of gasoline floats up and can be set alight.
Nice!
Can you use any other water?
Roses are red
Violets are blue
You maybe came to the comments cuz you had no clue
The bottle is slightly wet with a flamable, less dense, chemical. Could be a solvent. When you pour the water the solvent sits on top of the water.
Nice!
Oh so that’s where Fire water comes from.
"Papyrus, I burnt the water."
"Hey bro do you want some water?"
"Yeah, sure"
"How would you like your water? "
"Cold"
"I meant how would you liked it to be cooked"
The bottle of fiji actually contained a little amount of white oil which is not visible and when burnt it forms a yellow-orange flame and qlchol causes a blue flame
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
I don't know how you did it, but turning the beaker upside down was pointless given that the rest of the video was spliced in directly after you set it back down.
No splicing! Check out how it is done here: th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
I know how it was done, but you could also electrolize the water and ignite the flammable gasses which are generated
Liquid formed when thermocol put in flax seed oil., So is this liquid harmful if come in contact with hand, palm, skin or face.
Uncle Bill used to bring his vodka into football games in a water bottle. 😂
You used the Schwartz !? 🤷♂️
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
Some caveman: *confused uga buga* 😂😂😂
"Uh Papyrus... I burned the water"
Random guess. Surface tension?
I added a few drops of heptane to the flask prior to adding the water
Naptha, ether, hexane, heptane, butane, etc. in the beaker. Light, colorless, non-polar, oil of some kind.
SMH, reading these comments shows how poorly people did in chemistry class....
Hydrogen in the flask? wouldn't pour out when you flip it over because its lighter than air. However there may have been just enough time to fill the flask and light the bit of gas left at the top before it went out? Solution was prob posted but I wanna guess!
I can tell by the viscosity and sound of the liquid that is not pure water, not tap water for the sake of it. It's most probably mixed with some alcohol. It even formed a stable foam in the ring of the Erlenmeyer flask
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
You had some kind of liquid accelerant lining the flask. When you put the water in, it was heavier than the fuel so the fuel rose to the top and that’s what ignited.
Hexane - just a tiny amount in the inverted flask prior to adding water
Think the funniest take-away from this was that a lot of people think "alcohol" means vodka or beer, but there's different types of "water", like Fiji :DDDD
Probably a small amount of oil on the bottom, not enough to really run out of the jar when you flipped it over real quick like that, but oil is lighter than water or something I can't remember so when you mix it it sits on top
You are really close...great thinking! See the full explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
@Concerned Citizen Almost...
I never had a chance to take chemistry(my school never had it sadly) but I'm sure there was alcohol mixed somewhere in this? 🤔😊
Put Fiji water in a glass and lit it on fire 😂😂😂
Dumb dumbs be like: MOM IM SMART NOW! *finds real answer :mom I’m dumb again 😢😂
*TOM HOW THE F-K DID YOU BURN THE WATER?!*
Like this th-cam.com/video/VADn9gSdpNI/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
Water molecules will dissociate into its individual atoms when heated up with a lighter to smoke a cigarette
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
“uhhhh pupiris… I BURNT THE WATER” -sans 2014
By the colour of the flame, I would say the flask is full of methane, or heptane or other highly flamable and volatile organic solvent vapor.
Yup!
so this is why wildfires start...
Now we know how Sans has burnt the water
Chemistry in real life ✅
Chemistry math 💀
I used to gamble at Aria and people would demand Fiji water. I don't trust bottle water of any kind after I saw a movie they put something in the water bottle knowing he would take the healthy choice over a soda.
The flask is lined with a non polar solvent like hexane. Short carbon chained alcohol’s can’t be used as they are polar due to the OH group.
Indeed!
It’s like Sans burnt the water
This is the ultimate PAPYRUS I BURNED THE WATER
Easy, you’re the avatar 😂
😂
Water from Michigan tap water
It’s isopropyl alcohol in the Fiji bottle
See the explanation here th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.html
It wasn't Fiji water. You used tap water with a fracking oil rig nearby. Burning tap water is a thing. You just filled a Fiji water bottle with that stuff
See th-cam.com/video/sXK-hvr4ots/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
i did watch the linked video to confirm my suspicion that you coated the flask with a lighter than water solvent. very neat trick
😊😊😊