No because think about if you spill gasoline and it has been in the sun for a while does it react it doesnt and our atmosphere is 79%, give or take on the exact number, nitrogen!
Yes, nitrogen can be hot under certain conditions. When nitrogen gas is heated to a high temperature, it can become a hot gas. Additionally, in engineering and industrial processes, nitrogen can be used in high-temperature applications like heat treatment and combustion.
It depends on how much water, how hot it is, and how much liquid nitrogen there is. The water will initially cause the liquid nitrogen to boil; if there's enough water and it's hot enough, it may make the nitrogen boil explosively. However, if there's enough nitrogen, it will eventually freeze the water.
Yes, phosphorus does react with acids. It can react with strong acids to produce phosphoric acid and release hydrogen gas. The reaction is generally slow with cold acids, but it can be more vigorous with hot acids.
When boiling water and nitrogen gas come into contact, the nitrogen gas will liquefy and mix with the water. The liquid nitrogen will create a cooling effect on the water and eventually freeze it. This process is known as cryogenic cooling.
Anything at room temperature is regarded neither cold nor hot. <><><><><> If the question meant "Is nitrogen solid, liquid, or gaseous at room temperature?", then the answer is gaseous.
yes helium and nitrogen are hot gases
Yes, gasoline is the hottest. No other car gas gets even close to as hot.
Yes, nitrogen can be hot under certain conditions. When nitrogen gas is heated to a high temperature, it can become a hot gas. Additionally, in engineering and industrial processes, nitrogen can be used in high-temperature applications like heat treatment and combustion.
The gas that is normally used is argon, or a mixture of argon and nitrogen. A gas is needed that • helps prevent the evaporation of white-hot tungsten • does not react with white-hot tungsten • will not form an electric arc inside the bulb Argon is the cheapest of the noble gases because it forms nearly 1% of the atmosphere, and is a major by-product in the production of liquid nitrogen.
Gasoline is stored in tanks underground. The outside temperature has no effect on the temperature of the fuel stored underground.
Gasoline overflow due to heatexpansion. the molecules move faster.
The critical temperature for nitrogen gas is -147 degrees Celsius. This is the temperature above which nitrogen cannot be liquefied by increasing pressure.
It depends on how much water, how hot it is, and how much liquid nitrogen there is. The water will initially cause the liquid nitrogen to boil; if there's enough water and it's hot enough, it may make the nitrogen boil explosively. However, if there's enough nitrogen, it will eventually freeze the water.
The airbag contains sodium azide (NaN3) with potassium nitrate (KNO3) to produce nitrogen gas. Hot blasts of the nitrogen inflate the airbag.
There's actually four. The decay of the remains of dead animals and plants The growth of bacteria in the soil which take in nitrogen gas to make nitrates Bacteria in the roots of plants (such as peas, beans, clover etc) which can also tun nitrogen gas into nitrates Lightning flashes in thunderstorms which make the air hot enough for nitrogen and oxygen gases to react with eachother. Then rain washes the new nitrogen compounds into soil. Hope this helps (:
Yes, phosphorus does react with acids. It can react with strong acids to produce phosphoric acid and release hydrogen gas. The reaction is generally slow with cold acids, but it can be more vigorous with hot acids.
Likely not. On first thought, it appears to make sense, because pure nitrogen is not flammable and thus reduces the risk of the hot flame igniting the balloons fabric hull. But this is not easily feasible, because the flame, if directly heating the balloon filling, needs the airs oxygen content to burn completely. You could use a premixed-flame burner that mixes air and a combustible gas prior to entering the combustion zone and heating the balloon filling gas. But still, this would require a gas tight balloon hull. And that is not desired in a hot-air type balloon, because thermal expansion and contraction of the balloon gas (air) during each burn/burn-pause cycle causes enormous differences in gas volume and requires a means of pressure-relief (i.e. an opening). Improved Answer. Interesting theories but the brief answer is that nitrogen is not used in hot air balloons, although it is sometimes used when it is extremely cold to boost the pressure in the fuel tanks, since the power output of the burners is dependent on the pressure. The burners draw liquid propane so the nitrogen is not drawn into the flame