Heat it up?
put in a faster engine
heat
If you are referring to gas dissolution in a liquid, no. Gas will dissolve more readily under high pressure.
When you wish to dissolve a solid in a liquid faster, you increase the temperature. This makes the solid particles move faster and farther, and thus dissolve in the liquid faster. However, the problem with dissolving a gas is the opposite: gas particles already are moving fast and far, to the point where it is difficult to keep them stay in the liquid. The opposite is thus done, lower the temperature. A good example is a can of soda. Cold soda is almost always fizzier than warm soda because the carbon dioxide is dissolved more in the liquid. cool the liquid and increase the pressure
To make substances dissolve faster, you can increase the temperature of the solvent, stir or shake the solution, increase the surface area of the solute by crushing or grinding it, or use a solvent that is better at dissolving the solute. Additionally, you can increase the pressure on the system if the solute dissolves in a gas.
Yes, a liquid can dissolve a gas. When a gas comes into contact with a liquid, the gas molecules can be absorbed and become distributed throughout the liquid, forming a solution. Examples of this include carbon dioxide dissolving in water to make carbonated water or oxygen dissolving in blood.
There are a number of ways in which a gas could dissolve in a liquid. It could bind with the liquid molecules.
Yes, a gas dissolves faster in a liquid under low pressure because the lower pressure reduces the equilibrium concentration of the gas in the liquid, driving more gas molecules to dissolve. This is known as Henry's Law.
it does not though it does make you explode gas i tried it
precipation. from the clouds
air intake
yes