Commonly liquid nitrogen is stored below 100 psi. It can be stored at 0 psi. All liquid nitrogen tanks are insulated to stop heat from boiling off the liquid.
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∙ 13y agoWiki User
∙ 14y agoThis question makes no sense as written.
The composition of liquid air is: 80 % nitrogen, 19 % oxygen 0,9 % argon, 0,1 % minor gases.
No, N, or Nitrogen is a gas at room temperature, it makes up (as the diatomic molecule N2), 80% of the air you breath. Nitrogen forms a liquid at −195.8 °C.
At -63.5 degrees C chloroform becomes a solid and at 61.2 degrees C it becomes a gas. Therefore, at 80 degrees C, chloroform is a gas.
Are you sure you mean carbon? Carbon melts (turns to liquid) at 3550 degrees C, and boils at 3825 degrees C.
Water has a boiling point of 367 K ( = 94oC) at 81.4 kPa (80% of Standard Sea level Pressure)
Use a -80 freezer. If you want it colder, use liquid nitrogen.
Over that modest range of pressures, Nitrogen gas could have a temperature of anything above approximately 80 degrees Kelvin (minus 193 degrees Celcius).
You are touching nitrogen right now- almost 80% of the air touching you is nitrogen gas. Quite safe. LIQUID nitrogen is another matter- it is an extremely cold liquid that will freeze your skin on contact.
Depend on what gas it is and at what pressure. Water turn to liquid at 100 C and 1 ATM and condense at 80 C if pressure is 0.5 ATM. Oxygen in air will condense to liquid at -183 C and Nitrogen at -196 C and 1 ATM.
The composition of liquid air is: 80 % nitrogen, 19 % oxygen 0,9 % argon, 0,1 % minor gases.
No. The wind is composed of a small amount of water vapor and about 20% oxygen and about 80% nitrogen. The water vapor may freeze but the oxygen and the nitrogen cannot freeze at the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Oxygen has a much lower freezing point than liquid nitrogen and if the nitrogen were to be frozen, liquid nitrogen is not cold enough to freeze it...sort of like trying to make ice using cold water.
The composition of liquid air is: 80 % nitrogen, 19 % oxygen 0,9 % argon, 0,1 % minor gases.
At -63.5 degrees C chloroform becomes a solid and at 61.2 degrees C it becomes a gas. Therefore, at 80 degrees C, chloroform is a gas.
No, N, or Nitrogen is a gas at room temperature, it makes up (as the diatomic molecule N2), 80% of the air you breath. Nitrogen forms a liquid at −195.8 °C.
Reduce the pressure on it.
Are you sure you mean carbon? Carbon melts (turns to liquid) at 3550 degrees C, and boils at 3825 degrees C.
i think a ten liter container at 800 degrees Celsius has more heat