It can be separated physically. By gradualy cooling air the gases are liquified each at their own teperature. The end result is solid CO2 (Cardice), liquid nitrogen and liquid oxygen.
2.02
2.02 atm
glucose
possible danger of oxygen asphyxiationCO2 has to be cooled greatly to be in a liquid state. So it would be dangerous if it got on you. Luckily it evaporates almost immediately so poses no long-term risk.
It can be separated physically. By gradualy cooling air the gases are liquified each at their own teperature. The end result is solid CO2 (Cardice), liquid nitrogen and liquid oxygen.
No it cannot be solidified niether can it be liquified, but it can be compressed.
2.02
2.02 atm
CO2 cannot do numbers, however, it can add up quite easily.
Yes. LPG - (liquified petroleum gas)
federal government is broke. More highway transportation vehicles combust fossil-fuels than do carry payloads of cryogenic liquified carbon dioxide gas. Can you say hypocrates?
There is no chemical reaction involved. The CO2 simply acts like a heavy blanket, pushing the air from around the fire away. A more complex physical reaction happens as the CO2 is discharged: the sudden drop in pressure as the liquified CO2 expands results in a rapid drop in temperature, producing pellets of dry ice (solid carbon dioxide). The cloud you see when a CO2 extinguisher is activated is mostly water vapor condensed from the atmosphere by the cold gas.
Milk is a liquid
No, they cannot.
glucose
putting it in liquified gas.