Scuba tanks get hot when you fill them. Putting them underwater keeps them cool. If they overheat, the burst disk may blow. But even if it doesn't, a "hot" fill will cool down to a lower pressure, so if you think you have filled the tank to 3,000 PSI, when it cools down you will find that you only have, say, 2,750 PSI in your tank.
Naturally the air we breath has 70% of nitrogen and only 21% of oxygen, this is done is scuba diving as well. Just oxygen is not enough for living, while oxygen is essential one.
Oxygen
No, only when it is released into the atmosphere at the ambient pressure.
No. Because there is no oxygen as there is only vacuum.
sunlight ionises oxygen, we fill it by not destroying it with pcps.
Yes, the oxygen and helium in a scuba tank are pure substances because they consist of only one type of molecule and cannot be separated by physical means.
No..It is hybridised to be precise.. See oxygen forms 3 sp2 hybrid orbitals with two half filled orbitals and one orbital filled with the lone pair.. hence the half filled orbitals are each filled by the hydrogen atoms respectively( as hydrogen requires only one atom for stability)..
Dude, you already do live in an area filled with carbon dioxide. If you mean an area without oxygen, and only CO2, then no, it's not possible to breathe there. The only thing that can live there is plants.
Not "life as we know it". Oxygen is poisonous, as all Scuba divers know; below about 30 feet depth, pure oxygen will kill you, and a few people react badly to oxygen in normal pressures. And without nitrogen and carbon dioxide, plants would be unable to live.
Because you have lungs and fish have gills.
Yes you can but only by draining all the oxygen. If the bedbug is in a room, and the oxygen is removed, this will also suffocate any other animals - and people.
No, Unfortunately! If there was a way, I would have found it out by now - I love the scuba clothes, but they are only for sale in the Star Bazaar, and they are extremely rare, and very expensive.