Dry Ice when combined with hot tap water can produce vigorous bubbling water and voluminous flowing fog. For example, with 5 pounds of Dry Ice in 4 to 5 gallons of hot water, the greatest amount of fog will be produced the first 5 to 10 minutes. There will be far less fog for the next 5 to 10 minutes as the water cools down and the volume of Dry Ice diminishes. As the water cools, the fog becomes wispier. Dry Ice makes fog because of its cold temperature, -109.3°F or -78.5°C, immersed in hot water, creates a cloud of true water vapor fog. When the water gets colder than 50°F, the Dry Ice stops making fog, but continues to sublimate and bubble. The fog will last longer on a damp day than on a dry day.
You put hot water in it and let it slip out
Hot Ice, Sodium Acetate, is made from vinegar and baking soda.
very tall
because ice is made by freezing water but hot water is the opposite that is why it melts fast
There is no such thing as hot ice. The ice is a cold and frozen solid made out of water. Ice happens when water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius. But if the ice is hot, it will turn into water. If you touch the top of fridge it most of the time hot or at room temperature, so the water(hot ice as you said it) will remain at the same temperature as the room or hot.
With glue
the ice cream cone and hot sauce
dude, not to be mean but ice scuptures is made of ice...ice is cold fire is hot...so burning match
Hot ice is primarily made using sodium acetate trihydrate, which is a crystalline powder that can be heated and then cooled to form a solid with the appearance of ice. The only other ingredient typically added is water.
No. Stars are made mostly of hydrogen and helium and are too hot for any sort of rock or ice to remain solid.
he made it to refresh people on hot days
The biggest was 3ft long made from 3 tons of ice cream ( vanilla ) and 1290 bananas.