Yes.
At high temperature (high power in watts) water is evaporated faster.
Fanning increase the rate of evaporation.
Pure water is evaporated faster than water with sugar.
Temperature, humidity, air movement, and surface area all affect how fast water evaporates. Higher temperatures and lower humidity levels tend to increase the rate of evaporation, while increased air movement and a larger exposed surface area can also speed up the process.
Yes, high temperature favors evaporation.
Examples: temperature, pressure, wind, humidity, area exposed to atmosphere, etc.
Temperature and surface area
Yes, cooler water will have a slower development that warmer water.
Because the solvent is water ant it evaporates quickly.
This depends on many factors.
Alcohol evaporates very fast and that cools the person better than plain water will.
Yes, the amount of water can affect how fast it freezes. A larger volume of water will take longer to freeze compared to a smaller volume because there is more heat energy that needs to be removed to lower the temperature of the water to the freezing point.