Originally Posted by
disco stu
I've heard this said before as to why your can't weld with oxygen propane. But reducing zone of a flame has to do with oxygen content in various parts (chemistry of burning), not to do with type of fuel being used. Can you explain further why this is the case with oxygen propane?
When acetylene burns in oxygen, it creates a reducing zone that cleans the steel surface. Propane does not have a reducing zone like acetylene and hence cannot be used for welding.
The reducing zone is created because the acetylene combustion is a two stage reaction.
The first reaction involves the acetylene disassociating in the presence of oxygen to produce heat, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen gas:
C2H2 +O2 → 2 CO + H2.
The second reaction follows where the carbon monoxide and hydrogen combine with atmospheric oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water vapor.
2CO + O2 → 2 CO2 2H2 + O2→ 2 H2O
Complete combustion of one volume of acetylene requires two and half volumes of oxygen; one volume of which is supplied from the oxygen cylinder and the balance from the atmosphere.
Jack