Temperature is much more aesthetic than low, imho
No you can't do that. There is a very low temperature to do that.
When gases are operated under very high pressure and extremely low temperatures, they get liquefied.
No. Chlorine has a very low boiling point considering that it is a gas at room temperature.
Add more chlorine.
You need to shock the pool. The difference between Total Chlorine and Free Chlorine is tied up and it will be cleared by shocking. Thatis the purpose of shocking.
No you can't do that. There is a very low temperature to do that.
No. It takes a combination of pressure and temperature to liquefy some gases. Hydrogen and helium were the last gases to be liquefied and that was with pressure and extremely low temperature.
When gases are operated under very high pressure and extremely low temperatures, they get liquefied.
Yes, at higher pressure and/or low temperature chlorine is a liquid.
At the very low temperatures required it becomes brittle.
Yes - low temperature and/or high pressure are needed, how extreme of either depends on the gas.
No. Chlorine has a very low boiling point considering that it is a gas at room temperature.
low melting point, it is a gas at room temperature....
A sphere has the lowest surface to volume ratio of any solid body. Since liquefied natural gas must be kept at a temperature far below ambient temperature, and since heat can enter the storage container only through its surface, using a spherical container minimizes the energy that must be expended to maintain the stored liquefied natural gas at a low temperature.
Chlorine molecules have weak intermolecular forces of attraction.
They can be liquified. Very low temperatures are required.
John O. Geremia has written: 'Maritime LNG manual' -- subject(s): Liquefied natural gas, Transportation, Low temperature engineering