At normal atmospheric pressure liquid helium will not freeze at any temperature. It remains liquid all the way down to absolute zero.
However, even liquid helium will freeze at higher pressures; there isn't any liquid that never freezes period.
u are answering the wrong question
No, not all liquids freeze at 0°C. The freezing point of a liquid depends on its specific chemical properties. Water freezes at 0°C, but other liquids, such as alcohol or oil, can have different freezing points.
Some examples of liquids that do not freeze at typical temperatures include liquid nitrogen, liquid helium, and liquid mercury.
Liquids become solids upon freezing. Most solids contract when they freeze. The expansion of water when it becomes ice is an unusual property.
Generally, liquids with lower viscosity and higher thermal conductivity tend to freeze more quickly. This means that liquids like water or milk, which have low viscosity and high thermal conductivity, will freeze faster than liquids like oil or honey.
The liquid that will freeze first is the one with the highest freezing point. Generally, liquids with a lower freezing point will freeze before those with a higher freezing point.
yes solids freeze faster than liquids
Freeze them.
You can only freeze liquids; aluminum tin is solid.
No, not all liquids freeze at 0°C. The freezing point of a liquid depends on its specific chemical properties. Water freezes at 0°C, but other liquids, such as alcohol or oil, can have different freezing points.
Some examples of liquids that do not freeze at typical temperatures include liquid nitrogen, liquid helium, and liquid mercury.
Liquids freeze because the particles have less energy so therefore becoming solid because the cannot spread as far apart. Liquids freeze when their particles have slowed down enough to "stick" together and form a solid structure. When the temperature--the average speed of particles--is low enough, liquids freeze into solids.
Water will.
No.
Yes, liquids in checked luggage can freeze during a flight if the temperature in the cargo hold drops low enough.
No, not all liquids and gases freeze in the same way as water. The freezing point of a substance depends on its chemical composition and molecular structure. Different substances will freeze at different temperatures.
Only the few liquids that expand when they freeze like water. But yes, they can.
Because some liquids have less kinetic energy.