When dry ice is placed in water, it sublimates, meaning it changes from a solid directly into a gas without becoming a liquid first. This process creates a foggy, misty effect due to the rapid release of carbon dioxide gas.
it foams
You will have some dry water sodium. Salty dry ice.
When dry ice, which is solid carbon dioxide, is placed in water, it sublimates, meaning it turns directly from a solid to a gas. This creates a foggy effect as the carbon dioxide gas mixes with the water vapor in the air.
try it and find out
The temperature decrease and water can be transformed in ice.
Rather than melts, dry ice evaporates. This process is called sublimation and happens at a slower rate than the melting of water ice.
When an ice cube is placed in water, it will begin to melt and eventually turn into liquid water. This process occurs because the temperature of the water is higher than the temperature of the ice cube, causing the ice to absorb heat energy from the water and melt.
A good hypothesis for a dry ice bubble experiment could be: "If dry ice is placed in warm water with soap, then bubbles will form due to the release of carbon dioxide gas from the dry ice interacting with the soap molecules."
There will be fake fog as it sublimes
The balloon should expand because the frozen carbon dioxide (dry ice) will sublime into carbon dioxide gas when placed into the room temperature water. The gas will expand, causing the balloon to expand.
Dry ice doesn't chemically react with water. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide and when heated it sublimates into (still very cold) carbon dioxide gas. The fog you see is water vapor condensing out of the air when that air is rapidly cooled by the gaseous carbon dioxide (just like when you exhale in cold weather or open the freezer in a hot and humid kitchen). The bubbling is just the carbon dioxide sublimating and the gas rising to the surface of the water.
When ice is placed in a warm glass of water, the ice begins to melt as it absorbs heat energy from the water. This process continues until the ice has completely melted and the temperature of the water reaches equilibrium. The final temperature will be a combination of the initial temperature of the water and the melting point of the ice.