answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Condensation is the change of the physical state of matter from gaseous phase into liquid phase, and is the reverse of vaporization.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How do condensation and vapourisation differ?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is difference between vaporization and condensation?

Condensation is where a vapour (gas) is cooled, and droplets of liquid form. Vapourisation is where a liquid is heated, and the liquid turns into vapour (gas).


The changing of a liquid to a gas?

it is called Vapourisation and conversion of a solid to gas is known as Sublimation


How do you condensation and evaporation differ?

evaporation is when liquid gets hot and turns into steam condensation is wen liquid gets cold and turns into a fog like substance


What are the terms describing the changes from gas to solid?

The change from gas to liquid is condensation. The change from liquid to solid is freezing or solidification. The change from solid to liquid is melting. The change from liquid to gas is vapourisation or boiling. The collective term that can apply to any one of these is a phase change.


What is the Latent heat of vapourisation of ethanol?

846 kJ/kg


How does sublimation differ from condensation?

Condensation is changing from a gas to a liquid. In sublimation, substance goes directly from solid to gas without ever becoming a liquid. Moth balls and dry ice both do that.


Give you an example of heat transformation?

heat of fusion and heat of vapourisation.


What is the process where a gas loses thermal energy then becomes a liquid?

condensation


What is the process when gas changes back into a liquid?

" Condensation " condensation or condensing


How does condensation differ from boiling?

Both are the process of water changing state: first condensation is changing from vapor to liquid and evaporation is from liquid to a gas.


Why is latent heat of vapourisation higher than latent heat of fusion?

latent heat of vapourisation is the heat energy required to change 1 kg of a liquid to gas at atmospheric pressure at its boiling point where latent heat of fusion is the amount of heat energy required to change 1 kg of solid to liquid at its melting point so that is why latent heat of vapourisation higher than latent heat of fusion.


Draw and discuss the relationship of heat of fusion and heat of vaporization?

There is no relationship between heat of fusion and heat of vapourisation