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Subject:
Mixing liquid air
Category: Science > Chemistry Asked by: ablegray-ga List Price: $3.00 |
Posted:
30 Mar 2005 17:43 PST
Expires: 29 Apr 2005 18:43 PDT Question ID: 502953 |
Are the common elements in the air we breath miscible in liquid form? Please explain. |
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There is no answer at this time. |
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Subject:
Re: Mixing liquid air
From: quantumdot-ga on 06 Apr 2005 12:09 PDT |
Do you mean dissolvable in liquid? Or will something like Liquid Nitrogen (LN2) mix with Liquid Oxygen (LOX)? I dont have a phase diagram in front of me, but I'm pretty certain that at the right T&P, LOX and LN2 will mix. |
Subject:
Re: Mixing liquid air
From: ablegray-ga on 06 Apr 2005 14:49 PDT |
Quantumdot Thank you for your attention. If you cool air (nitrogen, oxygen and argon) at sea level to around -300F. The gases turn to a liquid. The question is would they separate or would they remain a mixture? Gas companies use a distillation process to separate them quickly and completely, but that requires energy and... |
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