Gasses and Liquids do not simply "mix".
it drys up and dies.... :p
Solid: Computer monitor Liquid: Water, liquid nitrogen Gas: Air (mix of many elements that are all gases)
They are made of different states of matter
When boiling water and nitrogen gas come into contact, the nitrogen gas will liquefy and mix with the water. The liquid nitrogen will create a cooling effect on the water and eventually freeze it. This process is known as cryogenic cooling.
If you pour liquid helium into liquid nitrogen, the helium will not mix with the nitrogen and will instead form separate layers. Helium is lighter than nitrogen and has a lower boiling point, so the helium will tend to float on top of the nitrogen.
The vapor comes from the flavored liquid inside the e-cig. The liquid (usually made of a mix of propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin, with or without nicotine added) is heated just enough to vaporize it (convert it from liquid to gas).
Refrigerant enters a direct expansion evaporator as a saturated liquid vapor mix and leaves as a superheated vapor.
In the laboratory, cold fluids are commonly used. A mix of shaved ice and distilled water is used to establish the "triple point of water" - 0oC. A mix of alcohol and 'dry ice (solid CO2) is used to freeze out any water from a liquid. And liquid Nitrogen is used as very cold liquid to cool vacuum plant etc.
Water vapor becomes a cloud through a process called condensation, where the warm air containing water vapor rises and cools. As the air cools, the water vapor condenses around tiny particles in the air, forming tiny liquid water droplets. These droplets then combine and grow to eventually form a visible cloud.
Water is a liquid that does not mix with oil due to differences in polarity and molecular structure. The molecules in water are polar, while the molecules in oil are nonpolar, causing them to repel each other rather than mix.
Nitrogen gas will neither sink nor float in water because it is less dense than water and doesn't have a liquid state at room temperature. It will just mix and dissolve in the water, creating a solution. So, in short, nitrogen won't sink or float, it will just hang out in the water like a party crasher.
During evaporation, the particles of a liquid gain enough energy to escape from the surface of the liquid and become vapor. These vapor particles then mix with the air and disperse into the surrounding environment.