because ice is just water solid. and water and oil dont mix. so that would be the same for ice.
Use modeling clay to shape a volcano, then fill it with water and when you are giving your presentation, drop dry ice in it, it will begin to make fog.
Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide, totally different from ordinary ice, which is frozen water. Dry ice is much colder than water ice, thus evaporates quicker at room temperature. DO NOT TOUCH DRY ICE! It can hurt you badly.
Rather than melts, dry ice evaporates. This process is called sublimation and happens at a slower rate than the melting of water ice.
Yes, you can put dry ice in salt water. It will bubble furiously and cool down the salt water.
Dry ice doesn't melt. It sublimates at -78 0C, or -109 0F. Sublimation is a direct transition from a solid to a gas, skipping the liquid phase.
cold water makes dry ice closer to its freezing point. so hot water makes dry ice sublimate more
Hypothesis: I think the fog will affect the bubble and the expect that when all the fog builds up into the bubble the dry ice bubble is going to burst. I think that because when all the fog from the dry ice builds up in to the bubble then it is going to burst.
ice is slippery and dry ice is not because ice dosent dry out when the sun hits it and dry ice does!
a molecular solid...
Used in film and theatre and television - creates affect of mist or fog
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide (CO2). It is called dry ice because it does not melt when it heats up, it goes directly from solid to gas. It is NOT the same as ordinary ice, which is of course, solid water. Dry ice is much colder than ordinary ice.
Yes, dry ice is opaque.
Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide.
Do you sell dry ice
Simple. You keep ice in dry ice. But be careful not to eat dry ice!
Dry ice freezes and the wet ice and everything keeps cool and chilled but not frozen..obvousliy.
Dry ice is not an element. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, CO2, which is a compound.