This is a very very good question to ask.
Look at this website: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_monoxide_detector
It will tell you that CO is invisible and you cant smell it but it can kill you.
SO, if the alarm goes off because it detects carbon monoxide, then you must leave the room immediatly. Many people die each year from carbon monoxide.
The density of carbon monoxide at room temperature 1,14 g/L.
Water exhibits hydrogen bonding
Carbon monoxide is a gas at room temperature. It is odorless and colorless, making it difficult to detect without specialized equipment.
Assuming a normal pressure, yes, CO will be a gas a room temperature because its boiling point is at -191.5 deg C.
Nitrogen monoxide (NO) is a colorless gas at room temperature.
Carbon monoxide does not have a melting point because it is a gas at room temperature and pressure. It directly transitions from solid to gas in a process called sublimation, without passing through the liquid state.
it has a very low boiling point which is affected by its bonding
No, let's try to take carbon monoxide in room temperature, it's not odorless
Carbon, at room temperature, is a solid. Gaseous carbon would have to be at an extremely high temperature. Usually, carbon exists as a gas in the form of a different molecule i.e. carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide etc.
Yes, carbon is a solid at room temperature.. Elemental carbon is a solid at room temperature
Nitrogen monoxide is a gas at room temperature and pressure.
no