yes
No, carbon dioxide is more soluble in water than oxygen. This is why carbon dioxide can readily dissolve in water to form carbonic acid, whereas oxygen is less soluble and does not react as readily with water.
Carbon dioxide is more soluble in water than O2. The most soluble gas in water is ammonia. Carbon dioxide reacts with water to form carbonic acid.
Carbon dioxide is more soluble in water than oxygen. Carbon dioxide forms carbonic acid in water, which increases its solubility. Oxygen is less soluble in water but is still able to dissolve to some extent.
Carbon dioxide is highly soluble in water and blood plasma. 900 ml/ liter carbon dioxide is soluble in water as against 4 ml/ liter of Oxygen. So this question would have been about oxygen instead of carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide dissolves in water to create diluted carbonic acid.
Carbon dioxide is more soluble in sodium hydroxide than water because sodium hydroxide is a stronger base and can react with carbon dioxide to form a soluble compound (sodium bicarbonate). In contrast, water can only dissolve carbon dioxide through weak physical interactions like hydrogen bonding, which results in lower solubility.
CO2 at high Temperature as CO2 is used in Carbonated water like Soda Water
It is soluble in water.
There is no such thing as carbon trioxide. There is the carbonate ion (CO32-). Most carbonates are insoluble in water. There is also carbon dioxide (CO2) which is somewhat soluble in water.
This is because Carbon dioxide is about 25 times more soluble in water than oxygen at body temperature. Carbon dioxide is more soluble because a chemical reaction takes place with water when it dissolves forming Carbonic acid when combined with water. There is no chemical reaction taking place when oxygen dissolves in water.
SO2 is less soluble in water... but solution of SO2 and CO2 will be colourless...
Yes, sulfur dioxide is soluble in water. It forms sulfurous acid when dissolved, which contributes to its ability to dissolve in water.