The answer below this paragraph is in error. It applies to CO (Carbon Monoxide), not CO2 (Carbon Dioxide), even though both gases are produced by burning fossil fuels. The inhalation of excessive CO2 can indeed poison a person, but in a very different way. CO2 can combine with the water in our bodies to produce Carbonic Acid (CH2O3); we can tolerate the amount of acid produced by breathing the minute quantities of CO2 in natural air, but if the air reaches 1% problems occur, beginning with drowsiness. At 5%, a person can die from the acidosis that has already begun to set in at 3%. You can look up the details yourself. As for breathing the fumes of dry ice, the problems caused are mostly related to the extreme cold if you get too close to the source. However, if a person persists in breathing the heavier CO2 from the dry ice, he can indeed incur some degree of poisoning as described above.
If you only breathe this gas, then you will quickly die off.
It will attach itself to the hemoglobin in the blood and hinder the hemoglobin in transporting oxygen so even breathing a mix of this gas for any length of time is highly dangerous.
Dry Ice is made of frozen stiff CO2. Fumes from a car is very dangerous to breathe for any length of time especially because of CO2 and its ability to attach to the hemoglobin in the blood.
The gas itself does not kill fast. It will just slowly fill up the blood plates with CO2 and since this does not give energy to our cells, the blood plates do not get rid of it on their way to the lungs again for a refill of oxygen. As time goes, more and more of the blood plates transports a payload they can not get rid of. More and more cells are deprived of oxygen and in the end you faint and eventually die.
Fortunately (for most) this gas is heavier than air we breathe and will only reach us to the top of the toes and the wind will quickly blow it away.
A lot of this gas indoor however causes a bigger risk.
Be sensible when playing with this type of ice. It is fun to put in water but not fun to breathe in its "fumes".
a molecular solid...
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.
You will have some dry water sodium. Salty dry ice.
If you mean the dry ice bomb as in putting dry ice in a bottle and sealing it, and then having it explode, then no. The bottle and the dry ice cannot be reused from the Dry Ice Bomb. The reasoning is that the Dry Ice would have already used enough of its fuel to try to explode the bottle that no fuel is left to explode another, and the bottle would be ripped in half by the Dry Ice inside, so the bottle cannot be reused.
Dry ice
yes because if you eat it it can freeze your cells and you will die
a molecular solid...
Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide.
Yes, dry ice is opaque.
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.
yes, until it starts to melt. or its dry ice
dry ice is for mixing with water to make fog
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide.
Do you sell dry ice
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.