As the number of carbon atom increases, compounds tend to be liquid (or even solid).
Generally speaking, methane gas can be "soluble" in liquid nitrogen if it was bubbled into it. Liquid nitrogen is cold enough to liquefy methane gas, and the liquid methane would then be miscible in the liquid nitrogen.
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
No. Methane is covalent, but it is a gas.
evaporation solid to liquid - melting liquid to gas - evaporation gas to liquid - condensation liquid to solid - freezing solid to gas and gas to solid - sublimation
CH4 is a gas.CH4 stands for methane.
beacuse it is becaiuse its called methane and starts with a M and ends with E :)
They form a liquid.Gas + Gas = Gas Ex. AirGas + Liquid = Liquid Ex. CokeGas + Solid = Solid Ex. Methane + PalladiumLiquid + Gas = Gas Ex. FogLiquid + Liquid = Liquid Ex. Water + AlcoholLiquid + Solid = Solid Ex. Material For TeethSolid + Gas = Gas Ex. Smoke PartcilesSolid + Liquid = Liquid Ex. Sugar + WaterSolid + Solid = Solid Ex. SteelEx. = ExampleLearn & Enjoy
Methane, at minus 170 degrees C, or at minus 170 degrees F, is a gas. It is a solid below -182.5 oC (-297 oF) It melts at that temperature and becomes liquid. Liquid methane boils at -161.6 oC (-259 oF) and becomes its form we may be more familiar with, gas.
As the number of carbon atom increases, compounds tend to be liquid (or even solid).
Solid
Solid: a metallic knife, a piece of wood, a glass beaker. Liquid: water, wine, beer. Gas: air, methane gas, argon.
Generally speaking, methane gas can be "soluble" in liquid nitrogen if it was bubbled into it. Liquid nitrogen is cold enough to liquefy methane gas, and the liquid methane would then be miscible in the liquid nitrogen.
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
No. Methane is covalent, but it is a gas.
Solid fuel: coal, wood Liquid fuel: kerosine, gasoline Gas fuel: methane, hydrogen
solid