Carbon dioxide IS air
Yes, carbon dioxide can dissolve in water to form carbonic acid.
Any gas that does not substantially dissolve in or react with water can pass through it. This group includes air (except for its carbon dioxide content), all the noble gases, and all the hydrocarbon gases.
Carbon is in most of the chemicals in living things and is in the air in carbon dioxide gas.
When oxygen and carbon dioxide are combined, no chemical reaction occurs since they are both stable molecules. They may exist as a mixture in the air or can dissolve in liquids to form carbonic acid (H2CO3).
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is commonly used to remove carbon dioxide from air. When sodium hydroxide reacts with carbon dioxide, it forms sodium carbonate and water, effectively removing the carbon dioxide from the air.
No, carbon dioxide does not dissolve in kerosene. Kerosene is a nonpolar solvent, while carbon dioxide is a nonpolar gas, so they do not have a strong affinity for each other.
Yes, carbon dioxide can dissolve in water to form carbonic acid.
Carbon dioxide has a very low solubility in ethanol.
Carbon Dioxide dissolves in the animal known as Diethylus Etherus
Carbon dioxide binds to a haem group in a haemoglobin molecule
Carbon dioxide is more dense than air.
do autotrophs remove carbon dioxide from the air
carbon dioxide is a air which comes from the plants
The rain becomes acidic because Carbon dioxide, Sulphur dioxide and Nitrogen dioxide dissolve in rain drops to form Carbonic acid, Sulphuric acid and Nitric acid.
Any gas that does not substantially dissolve in or react with water can pass through it. This group includes air (except for its carbon dioxide content), all the noble gases, and all the hydrocarbon gases.
Carbon dioxide dissolves in water, forming carbonic acid. Only a certain amount can dissolve, however, because at a certain point the water is saturated. So the ocean can remove a certain amount of carbon dioxide from the air (becoming more acidic in the process) but it can't remove all of the excess that has been added.
Carbon dioxide is forced into the liquid at high pressure, causing some of it to dissolve (actually, even at normal pressures some carbon dioxide will dissolve in water, but using higher pressure makes more of it dissolve).