Science, asked by gbhoomi0130, 4 months ago

Find out the applications of all the inert gases and write them in detail.​

Answers

Answered by PᴀʀᴛʜTʀɪᴘᴀᴛʜɪ
5

Explanation:

Applications of Noble Gases

Applications of Noble GasesHelium. Helium is used as a component of breathing gases due to its low solubility in fluids or lipids. ...

Applications of Noble GasesHelium. Helium is used as a component of breathing gases due to its low solubility in fluids or lipids. ...Neon. Neon has many common and familiar applications: neon lights, fog lights, TV cine-scopes, lasers, voltage detectors, luminous warnings, and advertising signs. ...

Applications of Noble GasesHelium. Helium is used as a component of breathing gases due to its low solubility in fluids or lipids. ...Neon. Neon has many common and familiar applications: neon lights, fog lights, TV cine-scopes, lasers, voltage detectors, luminous warnings, and advertising signs. ...Argon. ...

Applications of Noble GasesHelium. Helium is used as a component of breathing gases due to its low solubility in fluids or lipids. ...Neon. Neon has many common and familiar applications: neon lights, fog lights, TV cine-scopes, lasers, voltage detectors, luminous warnings, and advertising signs. ...Argon. ...Krypton. ...

Applications of Noble GasesHelium. Helium is used as a component of breathing gases due to its low solubility in fluids or lipids. ...Neon. Neon has many common and familiar applications: neon lights, fog lights, TV cine-scopes, lasers, voltage detectors, luminous warnings, and advertising signs. ...Argon. ...Krypton. ...Xenon. ...

Applications of Noble GasesHelium. Helium is used as a component of breathing gases due to its low solubility in fluids or lipids. ...Neon. Neon has many common and familiar applications: neon lights, fog lights, TV cine-scopes, lasers, voltage detectors, luminous warnings, and advertising signs. ...Argon. ...Krypton. ...Xenon. ...Radon.

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