Nature: Lewis Acid-Base Bifunctional Ionic Covalent Organic Frameworks for CO2 Chemical Fixation
Nature: Cobalt- and ionic liquid-functionalized covalent organic framework for cooperative catalytic CO2 cycloaddition
Cobalt- and ionic liquid-functionalized covalent organic framework for cooperative catalytic CO2 cycloaddition
The Daily Californian: Chemists discovers how to capture CO2 using covalent organic frameworks
There are three types of bonds in chemistry: ionic, covalent, and metallic bonds. In this article, we will look at the differences between ionic and covalent bonds. Chemical bonding is the force of ...
EurekAlert!: Single‑point linkage engineering in conjugated phthalocyanine‑based covalent organic frameworks for electrochemical CO2 reduction
Single‑point linkage engineering in conjugated phthalocyanine‑based covalent organic frameworks for electrochemical CO2 reduction
$\ce {CO2}$ is considered a Lewis acid. How it is an acid? According to Lewis: “species that accept an electron pair are acids”. But $\ce {CO2}$ can't accept electron pairs because oxygen and carbon ...
Anyway, is it safe? Could I put a CO2 to nitrogen adapter between the CO2 regulator and the beer gas ( 75% nitrogen and 25% co2) bottle and operate it safely? If you tell me that the CO2 regulator won't take the pressure of the beer gas bottle, I'll just spend another 30 bucks and get a nitrogen gauge. It's not really to save money anyway.
Is it safe to use a CO2 Regulator with an adapter on a Nitrogen tank ...
Here is a phase diagram: Phase I $\ce {CO2}$, shown in the bottom-left corner, is the most common dry ice crystal structure, and it is molecular, exhibiting a face-centered cubic arrangement with respect to the carbon. The high-pressure Phase V $\ce {CO2}$ (top-right), on the other hand, has a "partially collapsed cristobalite" structure.