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Generally you'd use a heat block.
A supercooled liquid can become solid on heating.
No. Simply heating honey, while making it less viscus, does not change its state. It remains a liquid. Unless heating is prolonged enough to cause evaporation, the honey will remain a liquid, so no change of state occurs by simply heating.
Heating almost to boiling means that the liquid doesn't boil. Heating just to boiling means the liquid boils.
By heating the solute (Liquid in which it is to be dissolved)
Generally you'd use a heat block.
Generally you'd use a heat block.
Generally you'd use a heat block.
Yes they are used for heating small amounts of liquids!
A Beaker
The term retort applies to a container where fluid is heated and evaporated in distillation.There is also a beaker which does not contain an extremely large amount of liquid, but more than a test tube. Another word for either, with 5 letters, is "flask."
A medicine dropper is used to transfer small amounts of liquid.
A coil of conductive metal to run the water through (copper) a pump, and a heat source.
In science, a dropper is used for transferring small amounts of liquid from one vessel to another. A dropper is also known as a Pasteur pipette.
In science, a dropper is used for transferring small amounts of liquid from one vessel to another. A dropper is also known as a Pasteur pipette.
A supercooled liquid can become solid on heating.
I think it's liquid because heating it will make it evaporate.