Fluid is a wide range word, it may be related to very different products as: asphalt, Mercury, alcohol or water, and the raising of temperature will affect more or less(different rates) expanding the fluid, if fluid is placed in a closed recipient, the pressure will be increased
in an open recipient the pressure will be the same...
The volume decreases (you're talking about chemistry, properties of a gas, right?)
The pump or other hydrolics will break.
One way to increase the solubility of a gas is to decrease the temperature of the liquid. The solubility of a gas in a liquid is usually temperature dependent, although it depends on the particular combination of which gas and which liquid. Usually the solubility of a gas goes down with increasing temperature (think of warm carbonated beverages going flat).The other way to increase the solubility is to increase the pressure of the gas. The higher the pressure of the gas above the liquid, the more will dissolve. Again, think of a carbonated beverage: when it is sealed it doesn't go flat because it is under pressure, but when open to air, it will go flat.See the Web Links to the left of this answer for more
Evaporation does not raise the temperature of a liquid, evaporation happens because of the increasing temperature of that liquid.
No, it will not condense if its partial pressure does not exceed its (maximum) partial pressure of the component's liquid (or solution) at the same(!) temperature.
No - it is a gas element
A substance that is in the gas phase at a temperature at which it would normally be a solid or liquid
By lowering the temperature on increasing the pressure.
It will boil
No, the vapor pressure of a liquid is not a linear function of temperature. It follows the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, which is an exponential relationship between vapor pressure and temperature. As temperature increases, the vapor pressure of a liquid typically increases exponentially.
Increasing the pressure and decreasing the temperature the solubility increase.
gas can be converted to liquid by increasing pressure and by lowering temperature of gas
When the vacant spaces between particles of a liquid decrease, the liquid becomes more dense and its volume decreases. This can be achieved by applying pressure to the liquid or by cooling it, which causes the particles to come closer together and occupy less space.
No, increasing the pressure of a liquid actually raises its boiling point. This is because higher pressure increases the kinetic energy required for molecules to escape the liquid phase and enter the gas phase, which raises the temperature needed for boiling to occur.
One way to increase the solubility of a gas is to decrease the temperature of the liquid. The solubility of a gas in a liquid is usually temperature dependent, although it depends on the particular combination of which gas and which liquid. Usually the solubility of a gas goes down with increasing temperature (think of warm carbonated beverages going flat).The other way to increase the solubility is to increase the pressure of the gas. The higher the pressure of the gas above the liquid, the more will dissolve. Again, think of a carbonated beverage: when it is sealed it doesn't go flat because it is under pressure, but when open to air, it will go flat.See the Web Links to the left of this answer for more
condensation
Evaporation does not raise the temperature of a liquid, evaporation happens because of the increasing temperature of that liquid.
The boiling temperature of a liquid increases as the gas pressure a the liquid's surface increases.
Ice