Want this question answered?
At the standard atmospheric pressure of 101325 Pa water boils exact at 100 degrees Celsius.
Vapor pressure of a liquid at its normal boiling temperature is simply the atmospheric pressure, aka 1 atm, 760 torr, etc. This is by definition.
These temperatures are 0 0C and 100 0C.
1.54 atm is 156kPa
The partial pressures of water and benzene will be their corresponding vapor pressures at the boiling point so it must add up to 1 atm and this happens at roughly about 342-343 K.
1 atm
Each liquid has a different boiling point; 101,3 kPa is he standard atmosphere pressure (atm).
At the standard atmospheric pressure of 101325 Pa water boils exact at 100 degrees Celsius.
Depends on the pressure. The normal boiling point (at 1 ATM of pressure) is 100 degrees Celsius.
190 degress
Vapor pressure of a liquid at its normal boiling temperature is simply the atmospheric pressure, aka 1 atm, 760 torr, etc. This is by definition.
That depends a lot on the pressure - at higher altitudes (less pressure), the boiling point is lower. At standard pressure (1 atm.), the answer is 100 degree Celsius.
1.839797297 atm
all solvent has vapour pressure properties is there when the vapor pressure is equal to atmosphere at that patricular temperature is boiling point
it's when the vapor pressure of a liquid is equal to 1 ATM. the temperature at which something boils at
These temperatures are 0 0C and 100 0C.
1.54 atm