To liquify a gas, it must be cooled below its critical temperature while maintaining a pressure above its critical pressure. This causes the gas to condense into a liquid state, where the intermolecular forces are strong enough to overcome the kinetic energy of the particles. This process is typically achieved through compression and cooling in a refrigeration system.
One way is to liquify air using high pressure and low temperature, then fractional distillation to separate the air into its components, including nitogen.
There would literally be no air as there would be no space for it to occupy. If you compress air sufficiently it will liquify, but stilll occupy a discrete volumes.
Liquid nitrogen (N2) can be obtained by cooling gaseous nitrogen to its boiling point of -196 degrees Celsius (-321 degrees Fahrenheit). This can be achieved by using a cryogenic refrigeration system that compresses and cools the gas to achieve the liquefaction. The liquid nitrogen is then stored at low temperatures and used in various applications.
They begin to move around from place to place. We say the solid melts.
No, Liquify requires Photoshop to work. Much of the code for Liquify is actually in the Photoshop application not the plugin.
The higher the temperature, the more movement in the molecules, causing the substance to liquify, or turn to gas, whichever, more quickly than if there were no vibrations in the molecules.
Yes you can. Go to Filter > Distort > Liquify. For more details visit related links.
Modify
within seconds it will liquify your smoothly because of its fast speeds and direction of the blades
it is part of the liquify filter. The Liquify filter lets you push, pull, rotate, reflect, pucker, and bloat any area of an image.
Different parts of you and your spacecraft melt, liquify, disassociate, incandesce, burn up, vaporize, ionize, and disperse, and you are never seen or heard from again. It's not pretty.
My blender will liquefy fruits.
they liquify the innards of the pleyshyogeorian tree.
The first to successfully liquify hydrogen was physicist James Dewar in 1898. He used a combination of compression and cooling techniques to achieve this milestone.
At 1atm pressure, nitrogen should be cooled below -196C in order to liquify. When it comes to industrial purposes, a higher pressure is usually used as the meting point rises.
They need poison to immobilize and liquify their prey.