Dry ice is transformed by sublimation in carbon dioxide gas.
Adding dry ice to soil can have negative effects on plant growth because the release of carbon dioxide from the sublimation of dry ice can suffocate the roots by displacing oxygen. Additionally, the extreme cold temperature of dry ice can damage the roots and disrupt metabolic processes in the plant. Overall, it is not recommended to add dry ice to soil for plant growth.
Dry ice and baking soda can react exothermically, causing the dry ice to sublimate (turn into gas) rapidly. This reaction can create a fog-like effect due to the rapid release of carbon dioxide gas. It is important to handle dry ice with caution and in a well-ventilated area when conducting experiments with baking soda.
When more dry ice is added to a container with existing dry ice, it will sublimate and create more carbon dioxide gas. This can cause an increase in pressure inside the container, potentially leading to a build-up of gas. It is important to handle dry ice with caution in a well-ventilated area to prevent any safety hazards.
No, you can not use ice instead of regular ice in the cloud chamber experiment. It would not react the same way. Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide, the cloud chamber experiment relies on the sublimation of solid CO2 into gas.
Dry ice, which is solid carbon dioxide, does react with vinegar. When dry ice is added to vinegar, it sublimates (changes directly from a solid to a gas) and produces carbon dioxide gas. This reaction creates bubbles and fizzing as the carbon dioxide gas is released. The overall reaction is: CO2 (dry ice) + 2CH3COOH (vinegar) -> 2CH3COO- (acetate ion) + 2H2O (water) + CO2 (carbon dioxide gas).
the soil is dry
Calcium - element - solid water - compound - liquid dry ice (carbon dioxide) - compound - solid milk - mixture - liquid soil - mixture - solid soap - mixture - solid/ liquid
a molecular solid...
To change the color of dry ice smoke, you can mix it with other substances that will react and produce different colored smoke. For example, adding food coloring to hot water before dropping in dry ice can create colored smoke. Be cautious when handling dry ice and follow safety precautions.
Water is uncompressed therefore the reaction isn't as big as soda with all the chemical contained.
they prefer dry
Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide.