Well, for starters, I assume that you already know that dry ice, as it is commonly called, is frozen CO2. Second, I assume that the CO2 that you are referring to is in a gaseous state. If these assumptions are true, then mixing dry ice and CO2 would accomplish next to nothing. The gaseous CO2 would get colder, and the dry ice would sublime faster or slower, depending upon the surrounding temperature before adding the gaseous CO2 compared to the temperature of the gaseous CO2. If warmer, it would sublime faster. If colder, it will sublime slower.
Snow and ice can sublime !
Yes
weak intermolecular forces because dry ice with sublime
when the air around it is very cold and dry. lord death was here
Sublime Ice Cream was created in 2003.
Yews. Solid CO2 (dry ice) will sublime on heating
Well, for starters, I assume that you already know that dry ice, as it is commonly called, is frozen CO2. Second, I assume that the CO2 that you are referring to is in a gaseous state. If these assumptions are true, then mixing dry ice and CO2 would accomplish next to nothing. The gaseous CO2 would get colder, and the dry ice would sublime faster or slower, depending upon the surrounding temperature before adding the gaseous CO2 compared to the temperature of the gaseous CO2. If warmer, it would sublime faster. If colder, it will sublime slower.
Snow and ice can sublime !
i hope so that would be sublime
Yes
weak intermolecular forces because dry ice with sublime
Solid carbon dioxide, or dry ice, and Naphthalene both readily sublime at standard atmospheric pressure.
Unless the dry ice is under pressure, it will "sublime" and change from a solid to a gas. Therefore, there will be no "puddle".
when the air around it is very cold and dry. lord death was here
All ices on comets sublime to gas as it approaches toe sun.
The element iodine and the compound dry ice (frozen carbon dioxide) both sublime, meaning that they go from the solid phase to the gas phase without passing through a liquid phase. Snow and ice can also sublime.