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The dye and other additives remain as a residue.
After water evaporation a mineral residue remain.
Kerosene will evaporate before water, given equal volumes and similar environmental conditions. The reason: water has considerable surface tension, brought about by hydrogen bonding between its very polar molecules. Kerosene is a hydrocarbon, and is non-polar, which means its molecules do not have a positive or a negative end. Water's surface tension resists evaporation. Kerosene's lack of surface tension (because of its non-polarity) makes it evaporate more quickly.
I am sure temperature plays a part bc in the winter time I spilled a little filling my kerosene heater and it took a couple hours for it to disapear. Just recently I dripped some moving the container and it only took about an hour to disapear. Also if it is outside I am sure that it will evaporate even faster. Hope this helps.
Yes, because gasoline is volatile. Volatile are liquids that evaporate rapidly.
No, salt remain as a residue.
Salt remain as a residue.
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The dye and other additives remain as a residue.
Morphine sulfate in liquid is mostly water. If left to evaporate, the water will go, leaving morphine sulfate as a residue.
Salt does not evaporate. Solids do not evaporate .Salt water does evaporate, with the water becoming water vapor. A residue of salt crystals remains in place of the salt water solution after the water evaporates.
Water is evaporated, salt remain as a solid residue.
Heat it up a little to evaporate the volatile burning elements
Jubair-al-rashid doesn't know
The name is clear: it is used to evaporate a liquid to obtain the solid residue.
After water evaporation a mineral residue remain.
Salt is not evaporated, salt remain as a residue of evaporation.