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Tray
Compared to a solid object's molecules no. Unless the water is ice. Water molecules are more compact than gaseous molecules.
molecules from ice is more dense than water
Since ice is a solid, there is no free motion between water molecules due to the intermolecular bonds holding the molecules in place. Because of this, water molecules "vibrate" in place when it is frozen. The colder it gets the less water vibrates.
Water is more dense than ice because it's molecules are closer together.
It will be sated.
Tray
When water freezes it expands and the only way it has to go in an ice tray is up.
The hot water tray because some of the water evaporates, and it takes less time to freeze.
Melt the block, fill an ice cube tray with the water then freeze the ice cube tray.
Water, an ice cube tray and a freezer.
No, the ice molecules in ice are not ionized.
Compared to a solid object's molecules no. Unless the water is ice. Water molecules are more compact than gaseous molecules.
You may have a leak in your tray where the water dripped out before it froze completely.
When an ice cube slowly disappears from the ice tray in the freezer, that is sublimation. The solid water (ice) is turning directly to the gas state (water vapor)- it skips over the liquid phase.
No, when water turns to ice, no new molecules are formed. The molecules in water rearrange themselves into a crystal lattice structure when they freeze, but the individual water molecules remain the same.
The arrangement of water molecules start having their chemical bonds break as ice melts. Hydrogen bonds constantly form and break constantly moving everything out of position.