dry ice is carbon di oxide when pressure is decreased it becomes gas
well if its dry put it in a freezer and then leave it for a hour then put it in the fridge
Dry ice will last in a punch bowl, depending on its size. While dry ice will not keep for extended periods of time, it generally will last for your 6 hour party if stored in an insulated container prior to use.
ice is slippery and dry ice is not because ice dosent dry out when the sun hits it and dry ice does!
a molecular solid...
Dry ice can be stored in an old fridge where it will do no harm to the fridge's thermostst.
dry ice is carbon di oxide when pressure is decreased it becomes gas
well if its dry put it in a freezer and then leave it for a hour then put it in the fridge
Dry ice will last in a punch bowl, depending on its size. While dry ice will not keep for extended periods of time, it generally will last for your 6 hour party if stored in an insulated container prior to use.
solid carbon dioxide is stored undeer high pressure. this is because on decresing the preasure the temp will increase and solid carbon dioxide will be directly changed into CO2 in gaseous state.
ice is slippery and dry ice is not because ice dosent dry out when the sun hits it and dry ice does!
The atmosphere of Mars contain 95,32 % carbon dioxide. In the polar zones carbon dioxide is as dry ice.
Water is not "stored" in snow and ice. The actual substance changes, this is called phase change. Dry ice, for example, will change directly from a solid to a gas form. But for regular snow and ice, I don't think that sublimation would be possible.
solid carbon dioxide (CO2) is stored under high pressure. Solid CO2 gets converted directly to gaseous state on decrease of pressure to 1 atmosphere without coming into liquid state. This is the reason that solid carbon dioxide is also known as dry ice
a molecular solid...
If stored properly, cleaning chemicals and pesticides can be stored in the dry storeroom
depending on the type of food stored in your freezer, or the state you live in, your ice could come with a scent. The closer you live to sewer drains, the worse the smell, coloration, and clarity of your ice will be. It is best to stay away from ice that is not transparent. Some ice also comes with a foul taste and it is best to discard and use fresh water in your ice treys. Never trust brown ice.