Two ways:
1) gasify the wood in a pressure reactor and cool the bio-gas into a liquid.
2) Sulfuric acid....
If any liquid gets hot enough, it will turn into gas. The point that it turns into gas varies for each substance.
It is impossible to tell how long from the start of the experiment it was before all of the substance turned into a liquid without more information about the experiment. Perform the experiment again and use a timer to determine the length of time required to turn the substance into a liquid through heating.
ya mom
"Melting" is the point at which a solid becomes a liquid. Ice will become water at anything above 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius, for instance. "Boiling" is the point at which a liquid becomes a gas. Water will turn to steam (as it boils) above 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius. boiling is when you give fire and melting is when you turn something into liquid.
Gas is in its state for either or both of two reasons, both leading to the same effect. Either the temperature of the substance is too great to remain at a liquid state, or there is insufficient pressure to keep the molecules together enough to remain a liquid. Both reasons will cause the molecules to spread out, eventually turning into a gas. For a gas to turn into a liquid, either the pressure the substance is under would have to be increased or the temperature decreased, causing the molecules to be pressed together enough to return to its liquid form.
No, a substance changes from gas to liquid to solid as it cools.
a liquid then if cooled further it would turn into a solid a liquid then if cooled further it would turn into a solid
If any liquid gets hot enough, it will turn into gas. The point that it turns into gas varies for each substance.
ANY SUBSTANCE KNOWN TO MANKIND. Iron can be a liquid at high temperatures, and can evaporate/turn-into-a-gas at even higher temperatures. water
wood burning is a combsution reaction, so it produces carbon dioxide, heat and some water vapor, but not liquid water.
When a substance loses energy, it becomes more compact. A gas would turn to liquid and a liquid would turn to solid.
It is impossible to tell how long from the start of the experiment it was before all of the substance turned into a liquid without more information about the experiment. Perform the experiment again and use a timer to determine the length of time required to turn the substance into a liquid through heating.
nope, after being burnt so long the wood may only burn and give off certain gasses/chemicals, but because of the way the atoms and chemicals are structually built with its protons and neutrons, the wood will not turn into liquid
A liquid is a substance or a mixture of substances in solution.
Well you can prove they are the same substance by experimenting. If you boil liquid water it turns into steam and if you then cool the steam, it turns back into liquid water. If you cool liquid water it will freeze and turn into ice and then if you warm the ice it will melt and tun back into liquid water. Thus the common substance in all three states is the water. ------------------------------------------------------------- In general substance are either solid, liquid or gaseous at normal temperatures and pressures and if you heat the solids they will turn into liquid then gas and if you cool the gases they will tun into liquid and then solids. Solid, liquid and gas are 3 of the possible states of matter (there are other states possible)
wood doesn't melt on heating because while heating the compound required to change that substance into liquid gets evaporated quickly when we start heating.
When a substance changes from a liquid to a gas energy is absorbed. When a substance changes from a gas to a liquid energy is released.