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carbon monoxide, chlorine, carbon dioxide under certain circumstances
Ideally Carbon burns in air to Carbon dioxide (CO2) But under non ideal conditions, you will get Carbon monoxide (CO) as well as various oxides of nitrogen.
Its an underwater volcanic vent, that spews forth minerals, carbon, and acid (which is to say smoke, but under water).
CO, or carbon monoxide, is a gas at standard temperature and pressure. It exists in a gaseous state under normal conditions.
under a swim platform
Both CO2 and CO are gases under standard conditions (1 atmosphere pressure and 25 0C)
Under the van, under the drivers floor board.
Carbon monoxide and a variety of cancer-causing agents lumped together under the heading "coal tar."
Carbon (C) can react with Oxygen (O) under different conditions to result in different products. 2C(s) + O2 (g)---------> 2CO (g) [CO is carbon monoxide gas] C(s) + O2 (g)-----------> CO2 (g) [CO2 is carbon dioxide gas] Hope it helped.
Under the floor
Zyklon B, a brand name for a form of Hydrogen Cyanide
You mean, "What is a solvent for carbon monoxide?" Carbon monoxide will dissolve in just about any common gas that you care to name: nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, argon, neon, helium, hydrogen, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, methane, water vapor, nitrous oxide. How else does carbon monoxide get from here to there? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The solubility of carbon monoxide in liquids is low, for ex. 27.6 mg/liter in water. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In ALL liquids?? Perhaps you need to try hydrocarbons, fats, lipids, liquid nitrogen, liquid carbon dioxide (under pressure), and so forth. If carbon monoxide were not soluble in blood, then it would not be dangerous to human beings, mammals, birds, and reptiles. (We would breathe it in and then right out again.) In any case, a gas can be a solvent just as a liquid can. Try dissolving some sulfur dioxide in some nitrogen gas. It works very well, though we don't like this. Sulfur dioxide in nitrogen causes bad air pollution.