Liquid rubber has a number of uses. For example, it can be used as a roof sealant or to make molds. It's sealant properties are useful in making medical devices such as dental molds.
Aztec used herb to cure illness. Earaches used liquid rubber in their ears.
This is usually a liquid rubber-latex. You can actually use regular liquid latex if you apply it carefully, to act as insulation for some low-powered electrical projects.
With rubber motor mounts.
a liter is typically used to measure liquid and so does not have a length.
Some times red coloured liquid is used but mostly gray coloured liquid is used.
Typically heat-resistant, nonstick, and rubber-like, silicon rubber is commonly used in cookware, medical applications, sealants, adhesives, lubricants, insulation, and breast implants.
Rubber bands typically are not damaged by water.
Regular rubber bands typically cannot, but there are special rubber bands that are used to do that sort of thing. They are placed on the tail and left on the tail until it eventually falls off.
The two terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but foam rubber is often used for rubbers that start off as liquids (e.g., latex, liquid urethanes) and sponge rubber is often used more for solid rubbers (e.g., EPDM, Nitrile (NBR), neoprene).
Janola is the brand name of a liquid bleach that is used for clothing. Canola is an oil typically used to fry food in.
A centimeter but cubed it is used to describe the volume of something. Typically not a liquid.
If you drop a piece of rubber in liquid nitrogen, (in a dewar, where the liquid nitrogen does not boil that fast), then the rubber will be frozen. In that sense, the rubber will get hard and brittle. If by 'freeze' you mean the formal definition, which is to form actual crystals, as water does when it freezes, then the rubber won't freeze. You should know that when you drop the rubber into the liquid, the liquid will boil off very quickly for a while even though it's in a dewar. That's because heat will flow straight from the rubber into the liquid.