The liquid odor gets into the air by diffusion. Diffusion is the quality by that means the gasses tend to spread across the given volume. What is the exact reason for this phenomena is not known to me. I want to know the reason behind this phenomena. Why does gas move to fill the given volume is very easy to explain. Gas moves to make the pressure equal across the volume.
Some gases have no odor. Air and its normal constituents are odorless. Since smell, odor, is sensed from gases, any liquid or gas that does not give off any gas will be odorless as well.
Chloroform is a colorless liquid with a sweet odor.
Cyclohexane is a colorless and odorless liquid at room temperature. It does not have a noticeable odor.
A red liquid inside a thermometer, often colored with mercury or alcohol, can emit a metallic smell when exposed to air as these substances are volatile. The smell is more noticeable when the thermometer is broken or if the liquid is spilled, releasing the odor into the air.
there isn't much of an odor on silver when in a solid. in a liquid though it could be different.
For you to smell something it has to get to your nose be it gas, liquid droplets or dust, which dissolve in our noses or transmit their smell on some other way eg. methane is a gas and we can smell it, lemon juice is a liquid which we can smell, and powderd sulphur is a solid which we can also smell.
To remove the sour odor of clothes you generally wash them (again if they have already been washed) with detergent. When my brother moved out of our parent's home he left his old baby blanket that reaked of his body odor. My mother wanted to keep it because it because it was something personal to her. It took 5 washes to get the odor out. If washing clothes in detergent do not remove the odor the next step would be to mix fragerance liquid (to pour the liquid of air spray onto the clothes).
Caesium itself is a metal and does not have a distinct odor. When caesium reacts with air or water, it can produce caesium hydroxide which has a soapy or ammonia-like odor.
No, chloroform is a colorless liquid with a slightly sweet odor.
It removes bacteria and germs and oders from the air.
When copper II sulfate pentahydrate is heated, it decomposes to form anhydrous copper II sulfate. The appearance of the resulting liquid is a clear, colorless solution. It does not have a specific odor.
Carbon tetrachloride is a colorless liquid with a slightly sweet odor. It does not have a natural color.