water
oxygen boils at -183
Oxygen. Are you working on that STAR Science section practice (Question 6 in Physical Science section)?
That is the boiling point of oxygen. So if the temperature in going downwards then oxygen will begin to liquefy whereas if the temperature is rising, then liquid oxygen will begin to boil.
Oxygen is the first to boil.
Oxygen boils at a temperature of -182.96 degrees Celsius (-297.33 degrees Fahrenheit) at standard atmospheric pressure.
Every element has a boiling point. The boiling point is the temperature at which the element changes from a liquid to a gas. Many elements will not boil in the presence of oxygen. For instance, in oxygen carbon will burn (coal). Without oxygen carbon will boil at 6917 degrees F.
Oxygen boils at 90.20 °Kelvin (-182.95 °C, -297.31 °F)
needs the oxygen removed in the distilling process to boil in the boiler
Yes, oxygen boils at a temperature of -183 degrees Celsius, which is when it transitions from a liquid to a gas state. Oxygen does not have a boiling point in its gaseous form.
Liquid oxygen boils when its temperature rises enough to overcome the attractive forces between oxygen molecules, causing them to transition from a liquid state to a gaseous state. This process, known as vaporization, occurs at a boiling point of -183 degrees Celsius for oxygen.
When you boil water the oxygen content is reduced to zero. (All gasses are driven out,) Boiling it longer doesn't have much effect.
Fractional Distillation. When you boil all of the water, nitrogen, oxygen, helium, and argon out of the air, you are left with krypton.