Of course not,it is not liquid.IT is in gas state
NO it is not aliquid.It is a gas
gas
At room temperature and pressure there are gaseous, liquid and solid molecular covalent compounds. Examples Gas: methane, CH4, ethylene, C2H4 Liquid benzene, C6H6, ethanol, C2H5OH Solid: naphthalene, C10H8 The giant molecule covalent compounds such as silica are solids
CH4 is a gas.CH4 stands for methane.
Methane is not a metal. It is a hydrocarbon with the chemical formula CH4.
CH4 is methane, a gaseous compound at room temperature
NO it is not aliquid.It is a gas
gas
N2 - nitrogen gas - is gaseous at "room temperature". Nitrogen is about 80% of our atmosphere. K2S, potassium sulfide, is a solid. C8H18, or CH3(CH2)6CH3, is octane, a liquid component of gasoline. H2O is water, a liquid at room temperature. (Unless you are an Eskimo.) CaF2, Calcium Fluorate, is a solid called "fluorospar".
At room temperature and pressure there are gaseous, liquid and solid molecular covalent compounds. Examples Gas: methane, CH4, ethylene, C2H4 Liquid benzene, C6H6, ethanol, C2H5OH Solid: naphthalene, C10H8 The giant molecule covalent compounds such as silica are solids
All materials have the same temperature in identical conditions.
Crude oil is typically removed from very high pressure reservoirs and is made up from a range of different hydrocarbon chains. Gas as you refer would mainly refer to methane which is CH4 and oil as you refer is presumably the liquid fraction at atmospheric pressure. At high pressure CH4 is not a gas but a liquid (LNG is sellable form) and is mixed in with the heavier fractions that are also liquid. Once the crude oil is transferred to the surface, the pressure is reduced considerably. At this low pressure, the CH4 chain is no longer a liquid but evaporates into a gas. The liquid oil has a higher boiling point and stays as a liquid (unless the temperature is increased above the boiling point). On a far simpler level, you wouldn't say that you get 'steam' in your 'water'. at 25degrees Celsius water (H2O) is a liquid. However if you raise the temperature (or lower the pressure) then the liquid water evaporates into gaseous form. Cans of deodorant are similar. At a high pressure inside the canister the 'deodorant' is a liquid. When you push the spray, the pressure is reduced from the high pressure of the inside of the canister to low pressure atmospheric. The liquid boils off. (cooling of the gas also occurs as a result of the joule thomspn effect but that is enough info for now)
It depends on temperature,pressure and volume.THese are needed to find number of moles
At room temperature, mercury (Hg) is a liquid, and methane (CH4) is a gas. The melting point of methane is -182.5 degrees Celsius. The melting point of mercury is -39 degrees Celsius. It takes more heat to melt the mercury.
CH4 is a gas.CH4 stands for methane.
The chemical compound of methane is CH4, in a molecule there are 4 hydrogen atoms joined to 1 carbon atom. Methane is also a gas at room temperature, and it odourless and colourless.
Nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide.