The boiling point of carbon dioxide is -57 °C (or 216.6 K, or -70 °F), but this will only take place at pressures in excess of 5.1 atmospheres. It turns out that CO2 doesn't like to hang around in liquid form unless it is under a good deal of pressure. It will sublime (change directly from a gas into a solid) at anything above −78 °C, and deposit directly as a solid from the gas at anything below −78 °C. In environments without elevated pressure, it changes state from solid to gas and gas to solid (depending on temperature) directly without going through a liquid phase.
Added:
At 1.0 bar, normal pressure, it sublimes (solid-gas phase change) at -78 °C, 194.7 K without passing through its liquid phase.
At 5.185 bar the boiling point (from liquid) is -57 °C, 216.6 K.
Carbon dioxide has a boiling point of -70.6 degrees Fahrenheit. This means it takes quite a bit before it becomes a liquid.
Boiling point of Carbon monoxide, CO, is −191.5 °C (82 K, -313 °F)
the boiling point of carbon monoxide at atmospheric pressure is -196 Celsius
The boiling point of carbon dioxide is -57 0C at 5,185 bar.
-78 degrees C
-57oC
The melting point of carbon monoxide is - 205 0C.
Carbon trioxide is not a stable chemical compound.
It does not contain carbon monoxide, but it will likely produce carbon monoxide when burned.
no that is carbon dioxide,carbon monoxide is CO
The melting point of carbon is 3 500-4 000 0C in an inert atmosphere and at very high pressure. The boiling point may be a little higher. These data are unsure because carbon can sublime and measurements are difficult and probable inconclusive.
The melting point of carbon monoxide is - 205 0C.
it has a very low boiling point which is affected by its bonding
Dihydrogen Monoxide (H2O) is water. It boils at 100C or 212F at STP.
They aren't the same. The boiling point of carbon dioxide is -57 oC. (Wikipedia)
No, carbon dioxide has a much lower boiling point than water. The boiling point is the temperature at which a substance changes phases from a solid to a liquid. Carbon dioxide is a gas at room temperature, while water is found primarily in liquid form at room temperature. Therefore, at 78 degrees F, carbon dioxide is above its boiling point while water is below its boiling point.
Carbon trioxide is not a stable chemical compound.
Surprisingly, it is carbon.
of course we breathe out carbon dioxide not carbon monoxide
Soda does not have any amounts of carbon monoxide. It has carbon dioxide dissolved in it, but no carbon monoxide.
It does not contain carbon monoxide, but it will likely produce carbon monoxide when burned.
no that is carbon dioxide,carbon monoxide is CO
Carbon Monoxide carbon monoxide carbon monoxide I believe