Add a solute (like salt). This will increase the boiling temperature above 100 as well as make its freezing point lower than 0.
In 1 atmosphere of pressure, at exactly 100 degrees Celsius.
Yes. Not only can both phases exist, they must.
It is a pure substance (H2O) existing in two different phases as the same time. This is not considered a mixture.
NO , stupid . COME ON , think alittle :D
No
No.
all elements can exist as liquids, you just need to find the right temperature. Water is a liquid between 0-100C.
Steam at 100C
steam is more effective because the particles of steam have absorbed extra energy in the form of latent heat of vaporization apparent temp is 100c and actual temp is more than 100c whereas the actual temp of water is 100c
It can be anywhere in between 60C and 100C (boiling point).
Steam at 105 c
all elements can exist as liquids, you just need to find the right temperature. Water is a liquid between 0-100C.
5x2260, so 11,300 J or 11.3 KJ
Anything greater than or equal to 212F (100C). Superheated steam used in steam locomotives, steam turbines in power plants, etc. can be any temperature from 500F to 2000F depending on the design of the system.Note: if you can see the "steam" it is not steam. What you see are tiny droplets of liquid water that have condensed from the steam and is probably exactly at 212F (100C) because it is in thermal equilibrium with the invisible steam at the same temperature.
Steam at 100C
Steam at 100C
it depends what the liquid is. water liquid turns into vapour at 100c
It is different for every liquid. For water it is 100C
Nope. If you turn the heat off so the temperature drops below 100C, you will have non-boiling water. When the steam's temperature drops below the vaporization temperature it will return to liquid state.
Water boils into steam at 100C or 212F at sea-level pressure.
steam is more effective because the particles of steam have absorbed extra energy in the form of latent heat of vaporization apparent temp is 100c and actual temp is more than 100c whereas the actual temp of water is 100c
100C or 212F. It is the boiling point of water, where water turns from a liquid into a gas.
It can be anywhere in between 60C and 100C (boiling point).