English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

besides water??

2007-10-23 14:11:32 · 7 answers · asked by katheryn n 2 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

7 answers

Milk, OJ, Gatorade, Soda, OIL (yes it freezes)...etc..

Do you mean what elements in liquid form freeze?

I believe pretty much every liquid can be in it's other states: Solid, Liquid, Gas... Each achieving these characteristics at varying temperatures.

Nitrogen for example freezes at some crazy high temperatures not measured in Celcius or Fahrenheit, but instead Kalvin

2007-10-23 14:20:18 · answer #1 · answered by RUNINTLKT 5 · 0 0

ALL substances freeze, or rather solidify into a solid, at their freezing points, which is characterized by not only temperature but pressure as well. For example water freezes at around 32 farenheit or 0 celsius only at 1 atm, 1 bar respectively which happens to be almost exactly the pressure of our atmosphere. You need to be more specific in your question? What temperature or pressure range?

But just to speed things along alcohol is a liquid at room temperature and standard pressure, it freezes, so will gas and oil.

2007-10-23 21:19:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Freeze drying (also known as lyophilization) is a dehydration process typically used to preserve a perishable material or make the material more convenient for transport. Freeze drying works by freezing the material and then reducing the surrounding pressure and adding enough heat to allow the frozen water in the material to sublime directly from the solid phase to gas.

2007-10-23 21:19:58 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Basically everything freezes. Everyday solids, are "frozen" because they are all compounds that can be at their liquid state.

2007-10-23 21:14:50 · answer #4 · answered by Chemistry Lover 2 · 0 0

I don't believe there is any liquid that won't freeze eventually.

2007-10-23 21:15:18 · answer #5 · answered by Dan H 7 · 0 0

i'm pretty sure everything freezes eventually, just maybe at a lot colder temperatures than water

2007-10-23 21:19:43 · answer #6 · answered by whaddyaknow? 4 · 0 0

nitrogen

2007-10-23 21:13:53 · answer #7 · answered by shayyrian 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers