In suitable conditiopns of temperature and pressure, not available here on Earth, it can exist as a liquid or a gas.
However, here on Earth, in STP conditions. solid calcium carbonate decomposes on heating ( red glowing heat) directly into calcium oxide and carbon dioxide.
Here is the reaction eq'n
CaCO3(s) == heat==> CaO(s) + CO2(g).
The gaseous form of a substance that exists as a liquid at room temperature is known as vapor.
Water can exist in a solid state as ice, a liquid state as water, and a gaseous state as water vapor.
CaCO2 is not a valid chemical formula. The correct formula is CaCO3, which represents calcium carbonate. It is a common compound found in rocks, shells, and pearls, while CaCO2 does not exist as a known compound in chemistry.
Yes, sulfur can exist in a gaseous phase. At high temperatures, solid sulfur can be converted directly to a gas without passing through a liquid phase. The gaseous form of sulfur is yellow in color and has a distinct odor.
How about the little bubbles visible in softdrinks. They are CO2 in gaseous form.
totoy
The most common mineral of calcium is calcium carbonate; also calcium sulfate, calcium magnesium carbonate, calcium silicates, etc. Calcium minerals exist practically in all the countries of world.
earth is the only planet where the same substance can exist in gaseous , liquid , and solid form
It doesn't exist - calcium carbonate is limestone/marble - its insoluble
The chemical formula of calcium hydrogen carbonate is Ca(HCO3)2; this compound (which contain calcium, carbon and hydrogen) exist only in water solution.
Yes
Francium can be solid, liquid or gaseous.
Solid, liquid, gaseous and plasma.
The gaseous form of a substance that exists as a liquid at room temperature is known as vapor.
Water can exist in a solid state as ice, a liquid state as water, and a gaseous state as water vapor.
Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".
What makes you think it can't? The compound CaCO3 is a very common mineral.