No. Ice is simply water in its solid state. Ammonia is a completely different substance.
Water ice would remain solid in liquid ammonia, because the temperature of the ammonia is well below 0 degrees Celsius, the melting point of ice. At normal atmospheric pressure, ammonia is liquid below minus 33.34 degrees C.
yes ammonia use as a refrigerant
Ammonia gas is used in ice factories because it has excellent heat-absorbing properties when it undergoes a phase change from gas to liquid, making it an efficient refrigerant. By circulating ammonia gas in a closed system, heat is absorbed from the surroundings, leading to a decrease in temperature and the formation of ice.
Ammonia is not typically used in ice cream production. However, in some industrial processes, ammonia may be used as a refrigerant in refrigeration systems to maintain cold temperatures during storage and transportation of ice cream products. Its use is strictly regulated and monitored to ensure safety and compliance with food industry standards.
keep it in liquid ammonia
Ammonia
Neptune
Ammonia is commonly used in ice plants as the refrigerant gas. It is preferred for its efficiency in cooling systems and its environmentally friendly properties compared to other refrigerants.
abg's and ammonia
No not at all
"Ice" is the specific term for solid frozen water, but the term is sometimes used generically for other frozen liquids or gasses, such as ammonia.Ammonia is a compound of nitrogen and hydrogen, NH3. At room temperature, it is a poisonous gas. Ammonia boils at -28 degrees Fahrenheit, and freezes at -107 degrees F. This made it a good cooling medium used in early refrigeration units. The problem was, the early refrigerators would sometimes leak, and the leaks were poisonous. A non-toxic substitute called "freon" was developed to substitute for ammonia. Because plants need a lot of nitrogen, modern agriculture often uses "anhydrous" ammonia as a fertilizer. It is partly responsible for the nasty smell of urine.So if you chill liquid ammonia to -110 F, you will have frozen ammonia, or "ammonia ice". The nuclei of comets are often composed partly of "ammonia ice".
Jupiter has gases. It's composition consists of hydrogen (~90%), helium (~10%), methane (~3000ppm), ammonia (~260ppm), hydrogen deuteride (~28), ethane (~5.8ppm), water (~4ppm), and trace amounts of ammonia ice, water ice, and ammonia hydrosulfide.