A heavy fog. A useful, though basic special effects technique for movie-making.
Putting dry ice in water causes it to sublimate more quickly, releasing carbon dioxide gas at a faster rate. The water helps transfer heat to the dry ice, causing it to sublimate faster and therefore increasing the amount of gas produced.
You can see dry ice fog even though carbon dioxide is invisible due to water vapor. The visible fog is from ambient water vapor that is condensed by the extreme cold of dry ice. Without plenty of ambient water vapor, the fog output of dry ice is reduced. This is another reason why dry ice foggers often involve hot water.
cold water makes dry ice closer to its freezing point. so hot water makes dry ice sublimate more
You will have some dry water sodium. Salty dry ice.
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.
combine dry ice and water
dry ice and water enjoy
It sinks. Thanks for using Answers.com!
The mist produced by dry ice is actually carbon dioxide gas. When dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) sublimates, it transitions directly from a solid to a gas, creating the cloudy mist effect.
Putting dry ice in water causes it to sublimate more quickly, releasing carbon dioxide gas at a faster rate. The water helps transfer heat to the dry ice, causing it to sublimate faster and therefore increasing the amount of gas produced.
dry ice is for mixing with water to make fog
You can see dry ice fog even though carbon dioxide is invisible due to water vapor. The visible fog is from ambient water vapor that is condensed by the extreme cold of dry ice. Without plenty of ambient water vapor, the fog output of dry ice is reduced. This is another reason why dry ice foggers often involve hot water.
No. The temperature of dry ice is far lower than that of ice water.
cold water makes dry ice closer to its freezing point. so hot water makes dry ice sublimate more
You will have some dry water sodium. Salty dry ice.
No. Dry ice is carbon dioxide in the solid state. Regular ice is solid water.
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.