Commonly is water H2O.
yes it is transition from the liquid phase to gas phase
Iodine does not go through a liquid when changing phase. Carbon dioxide does not go through liquid phase. Both iodine and carbon dioxide sublime from a solid to a gas and condense from the gas to a solid.
i would assume that sublimation,solid to gas,would be the same answer when going from a gas to a solid.
This process is called sublimation. It occurs when a substance transitions from the solid phase directly to the gas phase without passing through the liquid phase.
gas
When the temperature decreases, substances can change phase from a gas to a liquid or from a liquid to a solid. This is known as condensation or freezing.
Each element and compound has its own temperature at which the phase change from liquid to gas (evaporation) occurs. For instance, the evaporation of water occurs at 100oC, whereas the same for (liquid) oxygen is -182.96oC. Some substances sublimate, i.e. that change from solid to gas without going through the liquid state/phase first; e.g. (solid) carbon dioxide.
Phase changes requiring the addition of heat energy are the phase changes from solid to liquid, liquid to gas, and solid to gas. These phase changes are termed melting (solid to liquid), evaporation (liquid to gas), and sublimation (solid to gas).
The phase changes of matter are melting (solid to liquid), freezing (liquid to solid), vaporization (liquid to gas), condensation (gas to liquid), sublimation (solid to gas), and deposition (gas to solid). These transitions occur due to changes in temperature and pressure.
The change of state from liquid to gas is called vaporization.
The phase change for liquid to gas is vaporization, which includes evaporation and boiling.Evaporation - The change of liquid molecules on the surface of a liquid to a gas.Boiling - The change of phase at or above the boiling point of the liquid, which takes place at nucleation sites within the liquid.
Saturated gas temperature is the temperature at which a gas would be in equilibrium with the liquid phase of the gas (or with the liquid phase of a component of the gas if it was a gas mixture).