The concentration of carbon dioxide over an industrial site might be higher, because of the emissions, however, carbon dioxide mixes well with other gases, so it will spread out all over the world.
Rate is often proportional to the concentration of the reactants. If the carbon dioxide were less concentrated we should expect the rate to decrease, other factors being equal.
I don't believe carbon dioxide has a liquid phase! It exists only as a solid (dry ice) and as a gas. Therefore it would be impossible to heat liquid carbon dioxide.
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
Generally, yes. Plants "breathe in" carbon dioxide and "breathe out" oxygen. Carbonation in water is suffused carbon dioxide, so we would expect that the extra CO2 would promote plant growth.
I expect you are asking what happens if carbon dioxide is bubbled through limewater. The limewater will become cloudy.
I'd say NO: I never would expect it, nor having heard of and can't think why it could be yes.
It would remain the same.
Yes, in the presence of sugar, yeast ferments releasing carbon dioxide (which makes the bubbles in bread dough).
The climate will become very unusually and we will have stormy climates. It will also be warm at times.
The climate will become very unusually and we will have stormy climates. It will also be warm at times.
You Ultimately would not expect them to have similar melting and boiling points.This is because Carbon Dioxide is a gas, it might have strong covalent bonds between their atoms but between their molecules they have weak intermolecular forces, therefore these forces are easily overcome during heating in lower temperaturesHowever when you look at Silicon Dioxide, it has a macromolecular structure. In other words the whole solid is actually just one molecule which its atoms are each covalently bonded to each other. Therefore since it has strong covalent bonds between them you would expect them to have extremely high melting and boiling points.Diamond is a macromolecular structure and it has a melting point of 3006 degrees centigrade. You could expect Silicon Dioxide's melting point (and boiling point) to be similarly high.
Fossil fuels, such as gasoline, methane, and propane, contain carbon. When fossil fuels are burned they react with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide. Due to the increase in consumption of fossil fuels, the amount of carbon dioxide in the air is increasing. Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere lets light energy in, but less heat energy out, thus producing a 'greenhouse effect'.