As I said before: I have no clue.
However, on a different (non-english) forum I found a statement by a well known grower who is an expert on growing with CO2 and AC.
He wrote: "
You forget that if you burn 30 kg of gas, for example, you get a larger amount of CO2 than if you get 30 kg of cold CO2."
Again, I have no idea and it is a really interesting subject for me as well.
But perhaps he is right. So I started googling and thinking.
First I thought about this: Propane for example is C3H8. There is still no O involved.
Only when you burn it, it uses O (which it gets from the air). Wikipedia: C3H8 + 5O2 > 3CO2 + 4H20 + heat.
So the Oxygen component is not in the bottle of Propane, but is only added to C during the burning.
This oxygen comes from the air in your grow room.
In the CO2 bottle, however, the oxygen component is already in the bottle. So in addition to the part C in the bottle, it also contains a lot of oxygen.
Could it therefore not be the case that you get less CO2 in gaseous state from 1lb of liquid CO2 than from 1lb of liquid Propane?
I also found some info on a site about how much CO2 a car produces that runs on
Liquified Petroleum Gas (a mix of butane and propane)
1 liter of LPG weighs 550 grams. LPG consists of 82.5% carbon, or 454 grams of carbon per liter of LPG. To burn this carbon into CO2, 1211 grams of oxygen are needed. The sum is therefore 454 + 1211 = 1665 grams of CO2 / liter of LPG.
So that would mean that 550 grams LPG turns into 1665 grams of CO2. Or 1 gram LPG = 3 gram CO2.
20lbs = 9071 grams.
9071 grams of LPG turn into 27213 grams of CO2.
That are 60lbs of CO2.
So if this is all correct, then it looks to me that it is wiser to buy bottles of gas instead of bottles of CO2.
But again, this is just me using google. Hahaha.