Hi DevaDevil,
Thanks for your response.
I think I did skip the details of combustion. Sorry I almost have forgotten my basic chemistry here.
1. Products in combustion of candle-fire experiment are H2O, CO2, and heat if I am also correct.
2. With the volume of the gas inside remains constant (because it is contained by the glass jar), increasing the temperature should increase the pressure by the ideal gas law (gaining kinetic energy). We can certainly measure the changes of pressure with a sensory detector.
3. To verify whether oxygen is an reactant (the left side of the equation), we will need to measure the amount of H2O and CO2 produced, and the numbers should match our calculated values when we balance out the chemical equation.
4. An increase of temperature.
The equation should looks like this
x *< candle compound> + y * O2 => a * H2O + b * CO2 + thermal heat
5. The bottom line is: mass and energy should be conserved.
PS: If there is any misused terminology (chemical equation, compound, etc) please do correct me! Thanks