At normal atmospheric pressure liquid helium will not freeze at any temperature. It remains liquid all the way down to absolute zero.
However, even liquid helium will freeze at higher pressures; there isn't any liquid that never freezes period.
u are answering the wrong question
Every single one if you make it cold enough.
It depends on the liquid. Water freezes at 0 degrees C, 32 degrees F, and 273.15 degrees K.
it is helium and alcohol
any liquid!
Liquids freeze at different temperatures but it is not likely that any will freeze at 100degrees C as that is the teperature at which water boils.
Yes. Any liquids freeze. Water, dish soap, and yes, even Windex.Hope This Helps!-Addii
No. Most liquids contract when they freeze. Water is unique in that it expands.
Liquids become solids upon freezing. Most solids contract when they freeze. The expansion of water when it becomes ice is an unusual property.
yes different liquids have different freezing temperatures
yes solids freeze faster than liquids
Liquids freeze at different temperatures but it is not likely that any will freeze at 100degrees C as that is the teperature at which water boils.
Freeze them.
You can only freeze liquids; aluminum tin is solid.
No. Vodka doesn't freeze ;)
Liquids freeze because the particles have less energy so therefore becoming solid because the cannot spread as far apart. Liquids freeze when their particles have slowed down enough to "stick" together and form a solid structure. When the temperature--the average speed of particles--is low enough, liquids freeze into solids.
Water will.
No.
Only the few liquids that expand when they freeze like water. But yes, they can.
Because some liquids have less kinetic energy.
Oil and Anti-Freeze
yes it does