It is not recommended to store argon gas with oxygen due to the potential risk of combustion or explosion. Argon gas should be stored separately in a well-ventilated area away from sources of heat or ignition.
Argon is an inert gas- it does not react with any other gasses. While fuel gasses (acetylene) and oxygen must be separated during storage due to the fire hazard, there IS no fire hazard from an inert gas. It may be stored with fuel gasses or with oxygen.
Cesium is stored in argon gas to prevent it from reacting with moisture or oxygen in the air. Argon gas creates a stable and inert environment that helps to maintain the purity of the cesium sample. This is important because cesium is highly reactive and can form hazardous compounds if exposed to air.
Oxygen is a light weight gas that makes up most of common air and is breathable, argon by it's density is not breathable and can cause suffocation by settling in the lower parts of the lungs and keeps oxygen from entering.
No, argon is not more reactive than oxygen. In fact, argon is a noble gas and is very non-reactive, while oxygen is a highly reactive element that readily participates in chemical reactions.
Argon is a Noble or Non-reactive gas otherwise we'd all be dead by now as about 1% of the air we breathe in is Argon along with 21% Oxygen.
Argon is an inert gas- it does not react with any other gasses. While fuel gasses (acetylene) and oxygen must be separated during storage due to the fire hazard, there IS no fire hazard from an inert gas. It may be stored with fuel gasses or with oxygen.
Cesium is stored in argon gas to prevent it from reacting with moisture or oxygen in the air. Argon gas creates a stable and inert environment that helps to maintain the purity of the cesium sample. This is important because cesium is highly reactive and can form hazardous compounds if exposed to air.
Argon dose not react with oxygen, reason be argon is a noble gas and dose not react with any other element.
No, oxygen and argon do not form an ionic compound together. Oxygen typically forms covalent compounds and argon is a noble gas that does not readily form compounds due to its stable electron configuration.
Argon is heavier than oxygen and helium. Argon has an atomic mass of 39.948 g/mol, while oxygen has an atomic mass of 16.00 g/mol and helium has an atomic mass of 4.003 g/mol. Argon is a noble gas that is denser than both oxygen and helium.
Oxygen is a light weight gas that makes up most of common air and is breathable, argon by it's density is not breathable and can cause suffocation by settling in the lower parts of the lungs and keeps oxygen from entering.
Oxygen condenses faster than argon and nitrogen. This is because oxygen has a higher boiling point (-183°C) compared to argon (-186°C) and nitrogen (-196°C), which means it needs less cooling to reach the condensation point.
You will get water and argon. Hydrogen an oxygen will readily and violently combine to form water. Argon is an inert gas, and so will not combine with other elements.
Argon gas cannot react with most substances, and can extinguish a flame if it displaces enough of the oxygen around the burning material. Argon is used as an inert gas in electric arc welding to prevent oxygen from reacting with the heated materials, such as aluminum and titanium.
Often it is water vapour, which can vary from 0 to 4 %. Otherwise it is argon, at nearly 1%
* argon and neon: noble gases * oxygen: gas, chalcogens group * uranium: radioactive metal, actinoids family
oxygen and acetylene gas Argon gas is used in MIG and TIG welding