The dissolution of potassium nitrate in water is an endothermic process.
The dissolution of potassium nitrate in water is endothermic, meaning it absorbs heat from the surroundings to occur.
Yes.
endothermic
The reaction between potassium permanganate and glycerin is exothermic, which means it releases heat as it proceeds. This reaction is highly exothermic and can lead to spontaneous combustion in some cases.
The combustion is exothermic.
exothermic- because exothermic gives off heat and endothermic is cold
The opposite of endothermic is exothermic. Exothermic reactions release energy in the form of heat to the surroundings, while endothermic reactions absorb energy from the surroundings.
KNO3 is the chemical formula of potassium nitrate.
It is an exothermic reaction.
The reaction between potassium permanganate and glycerin is exothermic, which means it releases heat as it proceeds. This reaction is highly exothermic and can lead to spontaneous combustion in some cases.
Endothermic. That is why it is used in ice packs.
I think it's exothermic.
The combustion is exothermic.
Exothermic state changes release heat energy to the surroundings, such as freezing and condensation. Endothermic state changes absorb heat energy from the surroundings, like melting and vaporization.
No, not all spontaneous processes are exothermic. Spontaneous processes can be exothermic (release heat), endothermic (absorb heat), or not involve a change in heat at all. The spontaneity of a process is determined by a combination of factors such as entropy, enthalpy, and temperature.
Freezing is exothermic, as the substance that is freezing loses energy to its surroundings.
Silicon is an element - endothermic or exothermic is meaningless.
Exothermic reaction.
Its endothermic... In my experiment, it went from 26 to 25 degrees celsius... Its endothermic... In my experiment, it went from 26 to 25 degrees celsius... This is wrong it is exothermic. Potassium chloride is snow salt. it is used because not only does it react with the snow to create hydrochloric acide and potassium hydroxide (both with much lower freezing points) but, the EXOTHERMIC reaction also helps melt the snow No, it is endothermic. The only reason we add salt to snow is to lower the melting point. If you're curious, dissolve as much KCl in a beaker as you can as quickly as you can. The water temperature will drop dramatically.
exothermic- because exothermic gives off heat and endothermic is cold