only of you are an idiot
Oil baths will allow you to heat substances gently, but, the usual way of find out the boiling point of a substance is to heat it until it boils
Very high. For example, sodium (Na) has a boiling point of 883 degrees C, and iron has a boiling point of 2750.0 degrees C, and gold has a boiling point of 2600 degrees C. You can probably find a Period Table that includes the boiling points of all the elements and much more information.
Finding melting/boiling points of substances is an example, its logical, find it out yourself.
For elements, look on a periodic table. For compounds, do a search on Wikipedia.
Draw a vertical line through the triple point.
Oil baths will allow you to heat substances gently, but, the usual way of find out the boiling point of a substance is to heat it until it boils
Very high. For example, sodium (Na) has a boiling point of 883 degrees C, and iron has a boiling point of 2750.0 degrees C, and gold has a boiling point of 2600 degrees C. You can probably find a Period Table that includes the boiling points of all the elements and much more information.
what is the melting point and boiling point of substance
The temperature in which a given substance will change from a liquid to a gas is its boiling point. Every element, compound and mixture has a different boiling point. Use an SI data book or the internet to find the boiling point of a particular suubstance.
After repeated measurements of the boiling point for all elements; rhenium has a boiling point of 5 596 0C.
at which temprature first bubble form of liquid its called boiling point.
This is an example sentence for the words, boiling point. Dad was upset all day but he reached his boiling point when he could not find the remote.
It depends, which chemical are you trying to find the boiling point for? The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius. For any other chemical, if you have the boiling point in Fahrenheit, just use an online converter.
This depends on the editor of the table: name of the element, chemical symbol of the element, atomic number - these are mandatory data; also melting point, boiling point, density, etc. if the space is sufficient.
Yes. The boiling point is hard to find though. The boiling point of Iron is 3134K. For more about the boiling point of Steel, see: http://www.physicsforums.com/archive/index.php/t-63308.html
To find the substance, you can use a Nomograph Table. Take the observed boiling point and the pressure to find the change in temperature correction. It was found that the actual boiling point was 3.5 degrees off what was stated, so the boiling temperature is 60.5 degrees Celsius. The compound has a boiling point of approximately 60.5 degrees (1) in water and (s) in cyclohexane and alcohol. Chloroform is extremely close to this, with its normal boiling point being 61 degrees Celsius and it matches everything else.
Lead(II) sulfate melts at over a 10000C. I can't find a boiling point and I am not surprised- I would expect decomposition at such temperatures.