The can is a solid. The soda is a liquid, and the carbonation is a gas.
Four examples of changes in state are: solid to gas (sublimation), gas to solid (deposition), solid to liquid (fusion), and gas to liquid (condensation).Four examples of change on state are liquid to solid, solid to liquid, liquid to a gas, and gas to a liquid.
Melting (solid -> liquid) Evaporating (liquid -> gas) Subliming (solid -> gas) or (gas -> solid) both are called sublimation Condensing (gas-> liquid) freezing (liquid -> solid)
The melting phase changes are Solid~Liquid~Gas and the freezing phase changes are Gas~Liquid~Solid
Liquid to gas
A gas can be compressed more than a liquid and a solid.
solid
Gas
If you mean Coca-Cola, and the like, it is a liquid with gas bubbles in it. Some other uses of the word soda would result in the answer solid.
If you mean Coca-Cola, and the like, it is a liquid with gas bubbles in it. Some other uses of the word soda would result in the answer solid.
At standard temperature and pressure it is a solid- baking soda.
It is a solid.
It is a gas (carbon dioxide). That is why it is called a carbonated liquid.
I am sure it is a solid because you cant pour it so it is not a liquid and it is not a gas because you can't see a gas and you can see bicarbonate of soda.So it has to be a solid.
Solid
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
The flavorful part is a liquid. The bubbly parts that nips your tongue is a gas.
As gas is the solute and liquid is the solvent then SODA ie bottled soft drinks is the right example. If gas is the solvent and liquid is the solute then clouds are the apt example.