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 and it changes phase it becomes a solid.
a gas.
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).
A heated liquid will become a gas.
Two phase changes that occur when matter loses heat energy are: Solid to liquid: When a substance loses heat energy, it can transition from a solid phase to a liquid phase. This process is called melting. Liquid to gas: Another phase change that can occur when matter loses heat energy is the transition from a liquid phase to a gas phase. This process is known as vaporization or boiling.
The particles of the substance gain kinetic energy as they absorb heat energy. Eventually there is enough kinetic energy for the particles to escape the liquid phase, forming the gas phase.
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).
When this happens,the liquid loses all its heat & becomes solid.
The 3 types of endothermic phase changes are the movement from solid to liquid, the movement from liquid to gas, and the movement form gas to plasma. Endothermic is the absorbing of heat.
The phase changes that involve a release of heat are those in which the particles move closer together. Thus, freezing is one phase change that involves a release of heat. The other such change is condensation.
When a substance changes from a liquid to a solid it releases energy. (You take the heat out)
it melts