No, the lower the pressure the less gas a liquid can hold and the longer it takes to dissolve. One example you may have seen is water boiling in a near vacuum at room temperature.
No
Oxygen stored as liquid is highly flammable.
Propane is a gas under normal conditions of pressure and temperature, but is normally storm under high pressure as a liquid.
Liquefied Petroleum Gas or LPG is a mixture of liquid propane and butane under pressure.
At a constant temperature, the amount of a given gas dissolved in a given type and volume of liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas in equilibrium with that liquid. See the link below for more information.
Acetylene is different from most gasses in a tank. An acetylene tank is not hollow- it contains a porous material (think of a hard sponge) that is saturated with liquid acetone. When acetylene is pumped into the tank under pressure, it dissolves in the liquid. This is similar to how carbon dioxide dissolves in a soda (in a bottle or an) under pressure. While in the tank, it is mainly in a liquid.
If you are referring to gas dissolution in a liquid, no. Gas will dissolve more readily under high pressure.
yes, an m&m will dissolve faster in hot water, because the heat from the water will speed up the molecules in the m&m, and cause it to dissolve faster than it would under cold circumstances.
If under enough pressure all gases can dissolve in liquids. :D
It is under lower pressure, however, it is under pressure enough to compress it into a liquid.
Soda pop "pops" because it is bottled under pressure, with CO2 in solution in the liquid. When the pressure is relieved, the CO2 bubbles out. Heating the liquid forces the gas out of solution. No CO2, no pop.
Pressure energy per unit volume is equal to the pressure and per unit mass is equal to the density of the liquid. When an incompressible liquid flows out of a tank in which the pressure is maintained , the liquid under pressure possesses potential energy.
Under pressure it is a liquid.
When a liquid is under pressure, this increases it's solubility, or the amount of a gaseous solute that can dissolve in it. When you open the can and the pressure decreases, there is more carbon dioxide gas in the pop than it can hold, so some of it must turn back to a gas.
Oxygen stored as liquid is highly flammable.
Petrol, or gasoline, at standard temperature and pressure is a liquid.
Propane is a gas under normal conditions of pressure and temperature, but is normally storm under high pressure as a liquid.
Under normal temperature and atmospheric pressure conditions propane is gaseous. However, when the temperature is reduced to below −42.09 °C or when it is stored under high pressure (approx 177 psi), it takes the form of a liquid.