The process is called sublimation. Sublimation is an endothermic phase transition that occurs at temperatures and pressures below a substance's triple point in its phase diagram.
This process can be seen with dry ice: solid carbon dioxide evaporates into the gas without becoming a liquid first.
Ice is the solid form of water (H2O) and water vapour. water is the liquid form of water vapour and ice.
Both will have same vapour pressure as salt{NACL} would get trapped in ice and in solid iced state get seprated from pure ice crystals. so in case melting of ice in soln state pure water will have more vapour pressure but in solid state both will have same vapour pressure.
When ice cubes are kept in beaker the water vapour in the air condenses on the outer walls of the beaker.this shows the presence of vapour in air.
we know that the water is H2O and the ice is H20 and the water vapour is H20. so we can tell that these are all the states of water.
Water - water, ice and steam/vapour
Water vapour depostion is water vapour transforming directly to ice without condensing first.
If the air is cold and dry ice can change directly into water vapour, by sublimation.
Water vapour depostion is water vapour transforming directly to ice without condensing first.
Ice is the solid form of water (H2O) and water vapour. water is the liquid form of water vapour and ice.
Both will have same vapour pressure as salt{NACL} would get trapped in ice and in solid iced state get seprated from pure ice crystals. so in case melting of ice in soln state pure water will have more vapour pressure but in solid state both will have same vapour pressure.
Ice Cube?
Ice. Liquid. Vapour.
When ice cubes are kept in beaker the water vapour in the air condenses on the outer walls of the beaker.this shows the presence of vapour in air.
ice
the ice is going through a state called sublimation- it is turning staight from al solid (ice) to gas(water vapour). The fumes you see coming of is the water vapour
Depends on the temperature of the heat that you're applying on the ice.
supersaturation of water vapour leads to the formation of ice crystal