The temperature at which the substance boils is the temperature at which it boils.
It's not the temperature at which any certain amount of it boils.
At sea level, liquid water never gets hotter than 100 degrees celsius/212 degrees fahrenheit. This is known as the boiling point, which varies depending on altitude. The low the pressure, the higher the boiling point, and vice versa. If you were inquiring as to the amount of energy needed to boil 200ml water in a certain amount of time, I can't answer, although I'm sure the math is very simple.
It doesn't matter how much of the liquid you have and it is a characteristic property.
A substance change from a solid to a liquid at its boiling point. This is when it reaches a certain temperature.
Water is a gas (steam) at 120 degrees Celsius.
The Boiling Point is the point at which a substance at liquid state boils. The temperature that the liquid has to reach to be at Boiling Point (B.P) ranges, it is different for each liquid. The B.P for water is 100 degrees Celsius.
The boiling point which varies for each liquid. For water that is 212 degrees F and 100 degrees C.
Liquid. Its boiling point is 78 degrees.
The boiling point of an element (with a certain atomic number) is expressed in degrees Kelvin and refers to the phase change (liquid to gas) this element makes at the boiling point.
water's boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius.
The boiling point is a physical property of the liquid that is independent on the liquid amount, It may vary with the pressure on the liquid or vary with due to any additives dissolved in the liquid.
This is called the boiling point. The exact temperature depends on what the liquid is. Each liquid has its own boiling point. For example, for water the boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius. The boiling point of ammonia is -33.34 degrees Celsius. The boiling point of bromine is 58.8 degrees Celsius. If you're looking for the temperature at which a specific liquid changes to a gas, ask a new question specifically about that liquid.
"Melting" is the point at which a solid becomes a liquid. Ice will become water at anything above 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius, for instance. "Boiling" is the point at which a liquid becomes a gas. Water will turn to steam (as it boils) above 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius. boiling is when you give fire and melting is when you turn something into liquid.
At sea level, liquid water never gets hotter than 100 degrees celsius/212 degrees fahrenheit. This is known as the boiling point, which varies depending on altitude. The low the pressure, the higher the boiling point, and vice versa. If you were inquiring as to the amount of energy needed to boil 200ml water in a certain amount of time, I can't answer, although I'm sure the math is very simple.
Basically what happens when a liquid is pressurized is that the boiling point of that liquid is increased to say 138 degrees, so this would be the boiling point instead of 100 degrees. So for every 1 bar of pressure the temperature is raised say by 30 degrees, and the aid of antifreeze effects this boiling point as well.
A liquid changes into a gas when it is heated to a certain temperature, known as the boiling point. Every substance has a different boiling point.
The boiling point of water is 212 degrees Fahrenheit.The boiling point of ethanol is 173.1 degrees Fahrenheit.
Which is most likely be the temperature of boiling water? 100oC is the boiling point of pure water - when water is boiling, it stays at a constant temperature until all of it is evaporated.