Yes, if the water is under higher than normal atmospheric pressure. Near hot volcanic vents under the sea, water can reach several hundred degrees due to the high pressure.
Heat it past its boiling point.
Boiling. A liquid boils at a temperature at which its vapor pressure is equal to the pressure of the gas above it.
The boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the atmospheric pressure, or the pressure above the liquid. So, to increase the boiling point without adding a solute, one can increase the pressure above the liquid.
It is not true; evaporation occur at the surface of a liquid and the temperature is under the boiling point.
A substance's boiling point indicates the temperature at which it transitions from a liquid to a gas. If the substance's boiling point is below room temperature, it will be a gas at room temperature. If the boiling point is above room temperature, it will be a liquid at room temperature.
A liquid with a lower boiling point will boil quicker because it requires less energy to reach its boiling point compared to a liquid with a higher boiling point.
At temperatures below the boiling point, this phase change is evaporation. Above the boiling point, the liquid boils.
This method is used whenever there is enough of the compound to perform a distillation. The distillation method of boiling point determination measures the temperature of the vapors above the liquid. Since these vapors are in equilibrium with the boiling liquid, they are the same temperature as the boiling liquid.
100 °C or above, water (liquid) turns into steam (gas)
The temperature at which a liquid boils is called its boiling point.
Boiling Point Elevation
No, in its native, room temperature state it is a liquid , one of the 2 elements (Mercury being the other ) to be liquid at room temperature.