The plain answer is no... you need a gas formation to have foam, since the foaming is due to the bubbling of a gas.
This ensures that there is no risk of evaporation or explosion due to gas formation.
A further study concluded that activated charcoal (4g) does not influence gas formation in vitro or in vivo.
As a rule, formations of these resources have lower permeability than conventional gas formations.
The ablation occurs by gas formation during polymerization.
Assuming you have no leaks, the best result would be to hold the cork down until you saw no more gas formation, then let it go.
Many kills are reported only when dead fish resurface due to decompositional gas formation, often several hours after the kill has occurred.
If neither of these are the case then most likely the porosity is due to gas formation.
This increase in stimulation zones has been the key to unlocking tight gas formations as the zones can be individually treated to increase overall production.
The abdomen begins to swell due to gas formation.