I don't believe carbon dioxide has a liquid phase! It exists only as a solid (dry ice) and as a gas. Therefore it would be impossible to heat liquid carbon dioxide.
No..? its not a liquid..
Liquid carbon dioxide (supercritical CO2) is used as solvent.
Carbon dioxide gas
when carbon dioxide is produced in an aqueous solution, you can see the bubbles floating out of the liquid.
It doesn't exactly "skip" the liquid phase, it's just that at normal atmospheric pressure there IS no liquid phase for carbon dioxide. At higher pressures, it is possible to liquefy carbon dioxide. There's no simplistic explanation for why the triple point pressure for carbon dioxide is higher than around 100 kPa, it just is.
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..? its not a liquid..
Liquid carbon dioxide (supercritical CO2) is used as solvent.
Yes, carbon dioxide will liquify under high pressure.
Liquid carbon dioxide (supercritical CO2) is used as solvent.
no
gas
Yes. Solid carbon dioxide is "dry ice" which is very cold.
i don't actual know ----------------- -------------------------------------------------- No ! The word solvent is not adequate for gases.
Carbon dioxide levels are tested through the blood
carbon dioxide is a gas in the air which we exhale out. water is a liquid which has H2o
when carbon dioxide is produced in an aqueous solution, you can see the bubbles floating out of the liquid.