Yes it can
It doesn't. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, which has a very small liquid range and appears to go straight from solid to gas. It doesn't. Dry ice is made with frozen carbon dioxide and regular ice from H2O (water).
Dry ice goes through one change to make "fog", but water ice has to go through two changes to become a gas.You could use water ice to make fog, but it would have to go through the liquid phase before it evaporates or boils. But dry ice, instead of melting and evaporating, will go through what is called sublimation, which is the change of matter of solid to gas.
dry ice is for mixing with water to make fog
No. The temperature of dry ice is far lower than that of ice water.
cold water makes dry ice closer to its freezing point. so hot water makes dry ice sublimate more
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.
No. Dry ice is carbon dioxide in the solid state. Regular ice is solid water.
You will have some dry water sodium. Salty dry ice.
Both dry ice and ice have cold temperatures and are commonly used for freezing and cooling. Ice forms at 32°F while dry ice forms at minus 109.3°F. Water ice is created when water is exposed to very low temperatures while dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide. Their main difference however lies in the fact that regular water ice melts into liquid while dry ice sublimates directly from solid to gas. Dry is also more dense compared to regular water ice, thus dry ice sinks in water while regular water ice floats.
Both dry ice and ice have cold temperatures and are commonly used for freezing and cooling. Ice forms at 32°F while dry ice forms at minus 109.3°F. Water ice is created when water is exposed to very low temperatures while dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide. Their main difference however lies in the fact that regular water ice melts into liquid while dry ice sublimates directly from solid to gas. Dry is also more dense compared to regular water ice, thus dry ice sinks in water while regular water ice floats.
Dry Ice is frozen carbon dioxide.
dry ice is (i don't remember ) minus 80? Celsius degrees and it turns to gas because of heatsince air is heat-isolating and water is heat-leading the answer is dry ice in water