Yes. Argon will condense into a liquid at about -186 degrees Celsius (-303 degrees Fahrenheit/87 degrees kelvin).
Yes!!! If you cool down sufficiently . Phase at STP gas Melting point 83.81 K (−189.34 °C, −308.81 °F) From Solid to liquid Boiling point 87.302 K (−185.848 °C, −302.526 °F) From liquid to gas. So argon will become a liquid if you cool it below '-185.848 oC'. (Extremely Cold).
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This depends on temperature and pressure, consider h2o. Is "water" a solid liquid or gas? Clouds are water vapor as is steam, rivers oceans and lakes are liquid, and icebergs are solids. However, Argon is a gas in earths atmosphere so at those conditions it is a gas. Argon is solid at temperatures below -189.3°C, at which temperature it liquefies. It is a gas at temperatures of -185.86°C and higher.
To convert liquid argon into a gas, you simply need to allow it to warm up to its boiling point of -185.8 degrees Celsius (-302.4 degrees Fahrenheit). As the temperature increases, the liquid argon will start to evaporate and turn into gaseous form.
Argon is a gas at STP. It becomes a liquid below -186oC and solid below -190oC at StP
Argon is a gas. It is not synthetic.
No. Argon is a gas at room temperature.
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Argon is a gas at room temperatures.
Gas that has gone through a compressor and been changed to a liquid so it can be bottled. Propane, oxygen, argon and helium are typical.
It can be a solid liquid or a gas, depending on the temperature
Yes!!! If you cool down sufficiently . Phase at STP gas Melting point 83.81 K (−189.34 °C, −308.81 °F) From Solid to liquid Boiling point 87.302 K (−185.848 °C, −302.526 °F) From liquid to gas. So argon will become a liquid if you cool it below '-185.848 oC'. (Extremely Cold).
When a gas is changed to a liquid the gas has condensed, or liquefied or cooled.
To convert from pounds of gas to liquid, you need to know the vapor pressure of the gas at the expected temperature. Without this information, it isn't possible to determine the exact amount of liquid argon needed.
Argon is a noble gas and does not have a hometown as it is an element found in the Earth's atmosphere. It is commonly produced as a byproduct of the production of liquid oxygen and liquid nitrogen.
There is about 1% of argon gas in all the air around us. They extract the argon by turning air into liquid and then using a process for argon.
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