water
No, dry ice is not the same as ice (made of frozen, solid, water)
It is sharply cooled, frozen or iced, Carbon dioxide(CO2), used in 'snow' extinguishers
Dry ice is made up of carbon dioxide liquefied and compressed in tanks.
It changes from a solid to a gas missing the liquid stage.
Dry ice is made up of frozen carbon dioxide, or CO2. In other words, one part carbon and two parts oxygen.
Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide, CO2. The elements in dry ice are carbon and oxygen.
The main chemical component of dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, CO2
In standard air pressure, carbon dioxide has two states: solid and gas. When exposed to high pressures, carbon dioxide can become a liquid.
It is made of Carbon dioxide...(^_^)
Dry ice is not an element. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, CO2, which is a compound.
Dry ice is solidified carbon dioxide (CO2).
It isn't. Answer --> It is an example of phase change and thus a physical change. Not a chemical change
No , it is not but vinegar contains water, and there's the usual (non-chemical) reaction of dry ice to any warm liquid... it begins to sublime.
Dry ice evaporating is endothermic-->+DeltaH A sparkler burning is exothermic--->-DeltaH The reaction that occurs in a chemical cold pack often used to ice athletic injuries is endothermic--->+DeltaH
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide. It has the chemical formula CO2. The correct formula for dry ice( cardice), which is solid carbon dioxide, is CO2.
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.
Yes, dry ice will evaporate at room temperature. Carbon dioxide, the constituent component of dry ice, is a gas at room temperature.
Dry ice is made of raw carbon dioxide (CO2).
Dry ice is not an element. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, CO2, which is a compound.
Dry ice is the solid form of Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
Dry ice is solidified carbon dioxide (CO2).
Dry ice doesn't "turn into smoke". Dry ice causes moisture in the air to condense, forming fog. This is a purely physical, not chemical, change.
Dry ice is simply the chemical carbon dioxide in its solid state. Dry ice is very cold and sublimates directly into carbon dioxide gas at negative 78.5 degrees Celsius at sea level.
No.
no.
Solid carbon dioxide is dry ice.