The liquid may boil and become a gas.
It's not the quality of the heat, but the quantity of the heat. It means you need to put a large amount of (heat) energy into that substance to convert it from liquid to vapor at the same temperature. (Check out boiling water.)
When a solid absorbs heat, it may melt and turn into a liquid. When a liquid absorbs heat, it may vaporize and turn into a gas. Conversely, when a gas releases heat, it may condense and turn into a liquid, and when a liquid releases heat, it may solidify and turn into a solid.
Yes, when a liquid vaporizes and changes to a gaseous state, it absorbs a significant amount of heat energy from its surroundings. This heat energy is required to break the intermolecular forces holding the liquid molecules together and to overcome the energy barrier for the phase transition.
When this happens,the liquid loses all its heat & becomes solid.
To change a liquid into solid at constant temperature, an amount of heat is released equal to the latent heat of that liquid. For water it is about 80 calories per gram.
It produces a very large amount of heat, plus diluted sulfuric acid.
it bubbled, evaporates,
Nothing.
It melts and turns into liquid
Heat of Vaporization
When you heat a liquid, it normally raises the rate of evaporation. The liquid, thus, becomes it's gas form.
When you heat a liquid, it turns into a gas through a process called evaporation or vaporization. The heat increases the kinetic energy of the liquid particles, causing them to break free from their liquid form and become a gas.