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  2. Alcohol burner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_burner

    An alcohol burner or spirit lamp is a piece of laboratory equipment used to produce an open flame. It can be made from brass, glass, stainless steel or aluminium. [1]

  3. Camphine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camphine

    It will not burn in a common lamp without a chimney . . . [burning fluid] is a mixture of rectified turpentine, with about five or six times its quantity, by measure, of alcohol. . . . It is the volatile nature of the alcohol which is the cause of danger." [24] Because of its volatility, burning fluid was implicated in a spate of deaths and ...

  4. Fragrance lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fragrance_lamp

    The original Berger lamp used methyl alcohol, while modern lamps use isopropyl alcohol (90% or more). [5] Perfumes or essential oils may be added. To start the catalytic process it is necessary to allow the wick to thoroughly absorb the fuel and then to light the catalytic burner with a flame and let it burn for approximately two minutes until the catalytic stone reaches the correct operating ...

  5. Oil lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_lamp

    Camphine, made of purified spirits of turpentine, and burning fluid, a mixture of turpentine and alcohol, were sold as lamp fuels starting in the 1830s as the whale oil industry declined. Burning fluid became more expensive during the Civil War when a federal tax on alcohol was reenacted.

  6. Turpentine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turpentine

    Spirits of turpentine, called camphine, was burned in lamps with glass chimneys in the 1830s through the 1860s. Turpentine blended with grain alcohol was known as burning fluid. Both were used as domestic lamp fuels, gradually replacing whale oil, until kerosene, gas lighting and electric lights began to predominate.

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