The Liquid helium is at around -450 F, while the liquid nitrogen is at around -320 F. They are both inert, so mixing them will not cause any form of chemical reaction. The temperatures will equilibrate, with the helium warming up because of the nitrogen, and the nitrogen cooling down because of the helium. What you will get will be a mix of liquid Helium and liquid nitrogen, with vaporized helium in the vapor space.
soda is a mixture of carbon dioxide and water(liquid). so its a solvent that is gas and a liquid that is gaseous
Liquid nitrogen is not dry ice. Dry ice is a solid form of carbon dioxide and liquid nitrogen is pure nitrogen in liquid form. Dry ice is frozen nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen is also frozen nitrogen, but is also pressurized. That's why it's in large, steel boxes. Chur.
No, carbon dioxide can exist in all three states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) depending on temperature and pressure. At room temperature and pressure, carbon dioxide exists as a gas, but it can be converted into a solid (dry ice) or a liquid under different conditions.
Carbon dioxide exists in various states on Earth depending on temperature and pressure. At normal conditions, it is a gas. At very low temperatures and high pressures, it can exist as a solid (dry ice) or as a liquid.
At -100 degrees Celsius, carbon dioxide would be in solid form, commonly known as dry ice.
Carbon dioxide gas
soda is a mixture of carbon dioxide and water(liquid). so its a solvent that is gas and a liquid that is gaseous
Dry ice is the solid form of carbon dioxide, not frozen nitrogen. When carbon dioxide gas is compressed and cooled, it turns directly into a solid without passing through a liquid phase, resulting in dry ice.
Your breath is a mixture of gases (including a combination of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and a few inert gases). ITS A GAS IT IS NOT LIQUID YOU DUBM @$$ NOT THAT HARD
Water,chocolate (liquid,solid),and dry ice (carbon dioxide).
Your breath is a mixture of gases (including a combination of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and a few inert gases). ITS A GAS IT IS NOT LIQUID YOU DUBM @$$ NOT THAT HARD
Compounds do not get a new name when they change physical state. Carbon dioxide's name in the liquid state in just "liquid carbon dioxide"
No, because dry ice is a solid and you cannot place a solid inside a solid. If it was liquid carbon dioxide (as opposed to dry ice, solid carbon dioxide) then it would behave similarly.
No..? its not a liquid..
You mean, "What is a solvent for carbon monoxide?" Carbon monoxide will dissolve in just about any common gas that you care to name: nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, argon, neon, helium, hydrogen, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, methane, water vapor, nitrous oxide. How else does carbon monoxide get from here to there? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The solubility of carbon monoxide in liquids is low, for ex. 27.6 mg/liter in water. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In ALL liquids?? Perhaps you need to try hydrocarbons, fats, lipids, liquid nitrogen, liquid carbon dioxide (under pressure), and so forth. If carbon monoxide were not soluble in blood, then it would not be dangerous to human beings, mammals, birds, and reptiles. (We would breathe it in and then right out again.) In any case, a gas can be a solvent just as a liquid can. Try dissolving some sulfur dioxide in some nitrogen gas. It works very well, though we don't like this. Sulfur dioxide in nitrogen causes bad air pollution.
Energy must transfer to the carbon dioxide from its surroundings
Dry ice is the solid form of carbon dioxide. While it doesn't cause anything, when dry ice sublimates (melts, except without becoming a liquid), gaseous carbon dioxide is released. So if this happens in an enclosed space, there will be a buildup of carbon dioxide.