Dry ice. At standard atmospheric pressure, the solid form of carbon dioxide called dry ice undergoes a
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Dry ice. At standard atmospheric pressure, the solid form of carbon dioxide called “dry ice” undergoes a phase change not to a liquid, but straight to a gas. This process is called sublimation, and like other phase transitions, heat energy is required. In this case, it is the latent heat of sublimation, which for carbon dioxide is 573 kJ/kg at the sublimation temperature of -78.5°C. If 150 g of dry ice is dropped into 0.50 L of water at room temperature (20°C), how much of the water will turn to ice by the time all the dry ice has sublimated? Note: When dry ice becomes a gas, the gas bubbles out of the system.
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Related Book For
College Physics Reasoning and Relationships
ISBN: 978-0840058195
2nd edition
Authors: Nicholas Giordano
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