Ethanol (the kind of alcohol you get in drinks) is liquid at room temperature. It boils at around 78'C, so will become a vapour at this point.
An alcohol solution is obtained when alcohol is dissolved in water (or in any other organic liquid solvents). So the alcohol solution is liquid.
If you think to ethanol this is a liquid at room temperature.
both a liquid and a gas
liquid!!! der!
It is a liquid.
Yes - at room temperature.
That depends on the acid. There are many different types that can be solid, liquid or gaseous .
You think to vapours of a liquid.
Saying something boils at 65 degrees means that that is the minimum temperature required to vaporize it. So anything under 65 degrees and it will return to a liquid. So about 64 degrees or so.
boiling point
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at standard conditions for temperature and pressure
when a substance exists as a liquid or solid under ordinary conditions its gaseous phase is called a vapor
Mercury is a liquid at ordinary temperatures.
That depends on the acid. There are many different types that can be solid, liquid or gaseous .
You think to vapours of a liquid.
Liquid alcohol will change to vapor when its temperature reaches its boiling temperature. When alcohol reaches its boiling temperature, each molecule of alcohol has enough energy to separate from each other, so each molecule can move freely. The boiling point of liquid alcohol is 351K or 78C
Anything at room temperature is regarded neither cold nor hot. <><><><><> If the question meant "Is nitrogen solid, liquid, or gaseous at room temperature?", then the answer is gaseous.
Any liquid can be a gas if you heat it strongly enough.
water is the substance
Yes, all of them.
Saying something boils at 65 degrees means that that is the minimum temperature required to vaporize it. So anything under 65 degrees and it will return to a liquid. So about 64 degrees or so.
ALL liquid substances at room temperature become gaseous at higher (sometimes much higher) temperature called boiling point, unless they decompose at lower temperature.
Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".