That is impossible to answer. It depends on which gas you are talking about and its pressure. At standard atmospheric pressure, oxygen freezes at -218.8 degrees C. Of course, under most circumstances the gas will liquefy before it freezes.
Different gasses freeze at different temperatures.
Yes. If it is extremely cold, the gas will freeze and will be unusable.
Yes, but you would have to get the temperature right down. Propane will freeze at -188'C at atmospheric pressure.
Gasoline freezes at an extremely low temperature. Well below -97oF. If you are looking to freeze gasoline, I would mix water into it, which would allow it to freeze at a higher temperature, closer to 32oF.
what temperature does diesel freeze at in Celsius
Before a gas can freeze it must first condense and become a liquid. Then the liquefied gas can freeze if the temperature or pressure is reduced enough. The change that take place is that the molecules move much slower and interact with each other more often, producing the physical characteristics of a solid.
Nitrogen can freeze anything and i think it is a frozen gas.
because the temperature on mars is so cold whatever form of water freeze and turn into gas.
All gases can freeze, as long as the temperature is cold enough, and the pressure conditions are right.
It will freeze quicker ina colder temperature. What is the temperature ?
why there is need to freeze plasma
Cute. Almost any gas can freeze if it's placed in an environment where the temperature is low enough and/or the pressure is high enough. But we can't think of a substance that's gaseous at the body's internal temperature and pressure and solidifies at any temperature and pressure that the same human could survive. Bottom line: We'd have to say 'no'.
At the triple point for the substance. At that particular temperature and pressure you have solid, liquid and gas existing at the same time, so it will "boil" (become a vapor) and freeze (become a solid) at the same time.