No
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide (CO2). Dry ice is obtained from CO2 at a temperature under -80 oC.
Dry ice is the solid form of carbon dioxide, instead of water. The reason why it's called dry ice is under normal circumstances, heating dry ice will turn it directly into a gas, skipping a liquid form. The exception in all cases is under high pressure will melting dry ice turn into a liquid.
Dry ice is a solid form of any gas
No, but there was a car buried UNDER 6 in. of ice!
Dry ice is made of raw CO2. Liquid CO2 cannot exist under earth's atmosphere. For this reason, when dry ice sublimates, it turns from solid directly to gas.
Unless the dry ice is under pressure, it will "sublime" and change from a solid to a gas. Therefore, there will be no "puddle".
If you carry a very large quantity of dry ice in a car with the windows rolled up, the CO2 gas that sublimes off the dry ice will displace all the oxygen and you'll suffocate. But a little dry ice and having the windows rolled down would be perfectly safe.
How much dry ice? Regardless, a signifigant amount to all of the dry ice will sublime (solid CO2 will not melt under any atmospheric circumstances) and some to all of the magna will solidify into igneous rock. The results are dependent on the quantity of dry ice.
This is because dry ice is made of nothing more than CO2. CO2 cannot exist in liquid form under earth's atmosphere. Therefore, when dry ice is heated it directly sublimates into carbon dioxide
Dry ice is not a liquid. It is a solid form of carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide changes from a gas to a solid at low temperatures, under pressure.
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide. When the pressure under which it is stored is decreased to the atmosphere, dry ice will sublimate directly from a solid to a gas without going through a liquid phase. This process can cause the dry ice to rapidly expand and create a cloudy fog effect as the cold gas condenses water vapor in the air.
a molecular solid...