it is colour less but when you are testing foods for fat, if fat is present it creates a cloudy ring. answered by chazbbes it is colour less but when you are testing foods for fat, if fat is present it creates a cloudy ring. answered by chazbbes
The liquid xenon hasn't color.
Yes, ethylene is more volatile than ethane. This is because ethylene has a lower boiling point (-103.7°C) and vapor pressure compared to ethane, making it easier for ethylene to transition from liquid to gas at lower temperatures.
Bleach liquid is typically clear or slightly yellow in color.
No, ethane is not an allotrope. Allotropes are different structural forms of the same element, while ethane is a compound composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
When you get it, it's liquid. It evaporates easily and boils at 34.6C (a slightly chilly summer day in the South), so when you breathe it or use it to start your engine, it's a gas. The freezing point is -117.4C, so it's not likely to become solid but if you wanted to put some in liquid nitrogen you COULD freeze it.
The oceans are made of liquid ethane.
Ethane is a simple hydrocarbon compound that is not typically relevant to first aid. In a first aid context, ethane would not have a specific meaning or application.
Ethanol is a liquid at room temperature primarily due to its ability to form hydrogen bonds between its molecules, which stabilizes the liquid phase. In contrast, ethane is a gas because it primarily exhibits weaker van der Waals forces and lacks the capacity for hydrogen bonding, resulting in a lower boiling point. Consequently, at room temperature, ethanol remains liquid while ethane is gaseous.
1-1-1 Tri-Chloro-Ethane
The liquid xenon hasn't color.
Yes, ethylene is more volatile than ethane. This is because ethylene has a lower boiling point (-103.7°C) and vapor pressure compared to ethane, making it easier for ethylene to transition from liquid to gas at lower temperatures.
Ethane is C2H6.
Ethane is composed of carbon and hydrogen.
Bleach liquid is typically clear or slightly yellow in color.
No, ethane is not an allotrope. Allotropes are different structural forms of the same element, while ethane is a compound composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
"Acetane" is a name sometimes applied to the gas "ethane". ACETONE : a liquid solvent, dimethyl ketone, used in a number of industrial applications
When you get it, it's liquid. It evaporates easily and boils at 34.6C (a slightly chilly summer day in the South), so when you breathe it or use it to start your engine, it's a gas. The freezing point is -117.4C, so it's not likely to become solid but if you wanted to put some in liquid nitrogen you COULD freeze it.