The "fog" generated from dry ice is a prime example of sublimation. Dry ice is actually solid carbon dioxide, which at room temperature goes directly from solid to gas, producing a fog-like effect.
mothballs, it is a solid, with a smell, if you can smell it it has to be in the air a gas, if has not melted and boiled first and is not a dust scattered in the air then it must have sublimed. ( gone directly from a solid to a gas)
iodine, moth balls, dry ice. bathroom deodorizer
6 examples of sublimation are: *dry ice *naphthalene *Camphor *Iodine *zinc chloride *nepthalene ball
Icicles in cold weather and sunlight; the CO2 polar caps on Mars; Iodine crystals.
sublimationAnswersublimation AnswerSublimation Its Sublimation
A solid that turns directly into a gas is dry ice. Sublimation
Just like by distillation, the different components of a mixture have different boiling and sublimation levels. If a mixture is heated up, the component that takes the least amount of energy to undergo sublimation will be evaporated out first, and the other component remains there in its original state.
The opposite of sublimation, where a solid changes to a gas is called deposition, NOT SUBLIMATION! Hope that clears it up :).
6 examples of sublimation are: *dry ice *naphthalene *Camphor *Iodine *zinc chloride *nepthalene ball
irrrom
Examples are: freezing, liquefaction, sublimation, boiling.
Sublimation is the process of direct transformation of a solid in a gas: examples are iodine, naphthalene, dry ice, camphor.
Examples: sublimation, melting, evaporation etc.
Examples: boiling, freezing, sublimation, evaporation, deposition etc.
Examples : sublimation, deposition, boiling, melting, freezing.
Sublimation causes a change from solid straight to liquid or vica-verca, skipping the liquid phase altogether. Examples are mothballs and dry ice (frozen CO2).
Examples; melting, boiling, sublimation, grinding, polishing, extruding, pressing, etc.
The process is called sublimation. Solids can turn directly into gases, and gases can turn directly into solid without ever being a liquid. Carbon dioxide (dry ice) is a common example of this. Other examples are mothballs, solid air fresheners (Air Wick), and iodine.
Icicles in cold weather and sunlight; the CO2 polar caps on Mars; Iodine crystals.