Iodine does not go through a liquid when changing phase. Carbon dioxide does not go through liquid phase. Both iodine and carbon dioxide sublime from a solid to a gas and condense from the gas to a solid.
sublimation
Yes, they can. This process is called sublimation. A good example of this can be found with dry ice, which is solid carbon dioxide. At pressures normally found on earth carbon dioxide cannot exist as a liquid, and instead will transition directly between the solid and gas states.
The change of state directly from solid to gas is called sublimation, and the change from gas to solid is called deposition.
i would assume that sublimation,solid to gas,would be the same answer when going from a gas to a solid.
No, electricity cannot freeze and become solid like other substances because it is a flow of charged particles and not a physical material that can change states of matter.
Substances that change from gas to solid undergo a process called deposition. Examples include water vapor turning into snowflakes, carbon dioxide subliming into dry ice, and iodine subliming into solid crystals.
Sublimitatition IS WHEN A SOLID TURNS DIRECTLY INTO A GAS! DEPOSITION IS WHEN A GAS TURNS DIRECTLY INTO A SOLID!
The process of dry ice sublimating, or turning directly from a solid to a gas, is a physical change. No new substances are formed, just a change in the physical state of the dry ice from solid to gas.
Water changes directly to a solid when heat is applied
A phase change directly from a gas to a solid is called deposition.
A phase change directly from a gas to a solid is called deposition.
No, matter cannot change states after a chemical change. A chemical change involves the rearrangement of atoms to form new substances, which may have different properties than the original substances. However, the state of matter (solid, liquid, gas) itself remains the same throughout the chemical change.