Ice (solid water) exists only below 0oC.
About dry ice (solid carbon dioxide, CO2) the following should be taken into account:
At pressures below 5.13 atm and temperatures below −56.4 °C (−69.5 °F) (the so called triple point), CO2 changes from a solid to a gas with no intervening liquid form, through a process called sublimation (evaporation from solid state).
The chemical properties are identical.
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.
Yes because when a chemical change happens the substance may not have some of the physical or chemical properties it had once before. An example of htis would be Dry Ice. This would be an example because dry ice was once just ice then they add a chemical and it turns into dry ice.
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 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.
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.
Carbon Dioxide
Yes because when a chemical change happens the substance may not have some of the physical or chemical properties it had once before. An example of htis would be Dry Ice. This would be an example because dry ice was once just ice then they add a chemical and it turns into dry ice.
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.
A chemical reaction is one that changes the chemical properties of a substance. Sublimation is just going from solid to a gas and is only a change of state.
Dry ice is made of raw carbon dioxide (CO2).
Dry ice IS the solid form of carbon dioxide. And "dry ice" IS the common name for the solid CO2. So the question should be "What substance is the common name Dry Ice used for ? "
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).
No, Icecream is not a chemical property. It is a chemical though that has chemical properties.
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.