You use a cryogenics compressor--a machine that repeatedly compresses, cools and depressurizes air. As the air gets colder and colder, gases will drop out of it. At -191C you will get some krypton--the concentration in air is only one part per million, so you won't get much. (This is why krypton is very expensive.)
i have kinda the same ? but all i have so far is that it forms a compound with fluorine to make krypton difluoride and krypton tetrafluoride
No, as a noble gas it is almost never reacts and does not burn.
It is, however, possible for krypton to hurt you. This isn't because the krypton is poisonous, but because of the lack of oxygen in the room. krypton takes up oxygen so if you were in a room full of it, you would suffocate. It is, however, possible for krypton to hurt you. This isn't because the krypton is poisonous, but because of the lack of oxygen in the room. krypton takes up oxygen so if you were in a room full of it, you would suffocate.
I don't think Krypton can be in living things, It's in Lasers, and the tip of your pencil. So, i don't think Krypton is in living things.
About $30 per gram
"Pure Krypton gas presently costs about $30/l (or $113.56 per gallon)"also krypton if induced causes instant death
Well superman hasent been around in awhile so in geussing you got alot of keiptonight n who in the hell can find it .... Did u dig it out the ground
Pure krypton gas currently costs about US $33 per 100 grams. This means that a milligram of the substance would cost roughly 3.3 cents.
there is no krypton in the human body
No. Krypton is one of the noble/inert gases, so it does not react with any other element (the exception to that rule is Xenon, which can form a compound with Fluorine, but this is irrelevant).
Krypton is REALLY expensive, so it isn't used very much. There are two uses for it: in lighting, a Krypton-filled bulb gives off an excellent white light. it is used in triple-pane windows as an insulating gas.
Krypton was the planet that the to-be superman was born and raised on, so Krypton came millions of years first.
You use a cryogenics compressor--a machine that repeatedly compresses, cools and depressurizes air. As the air gets colder and colder, gases will drop out of it. At -191C you will get some krypton--the concentration in air is only one part per million, so you won't get much. (This is why krypton is very expensive.)
i dont think so
i have kinda the same ? but all i have so far is that it forms a compound with fluorine to make krypton difluoride and krypton tetrafluoride
No, as a noble gas it is almost never reacts and does not burn.