Distillate is vapor that is drawn off from a heated mixture or solution and condensed to return it to a liquid. Many, many different kinds of vapors are condensed as a distillate as the result of the distillation of different mixtures or solutions. As such, it is impossible to specify a freezing point for a distillate without knowing what is being distilled and under what circumstances. Identification of a specific distillate must be made to state a freezing point for a distillate. When salt water is distilled to recover fresh (drinking) water, the freezing point of the distillate (the water) is 32 Fo (0 Co). And that's just one example.
The melting point of solid Distilled Water (a.k.a. ice) at Standard Pressure (1 atm) is 32 degrees F (0 degrees C.)
This is the point at which the solid phase (ice) transitions to the liquid phase (liquid water)
Oo C for unpure water. Approximately -40o C for distilled water.
273.15 Kelvins
0° Celsius
32° Fahrenheit
It depends slightly on the pressure, but it is around 0 degrees Centigrade.
32 degrees feirenheit
0 degrees Celsius
i think you mean what is the melting point of ice as water cant melt. the melting point of ice at sea level is 100 degres celsius
by adding impurities the melting point of ice can be increased.... and perhaps can water melt i think the right question suppose to be how can the melting point of ice be changed?
Water is liable to contain various things dissolved in it. Distilled water is water that has been distilled; this means that the water has been heated to the point that some of it vapourises. This vapour is then passed over a cold surface which condenses it into water. The vapour that was produced was almost pure water vapour, and so is the re-condensed "distilled water" almost pure water.
The high melting point points toward an ionic compound. Ionic compounds dissolve in water ie a a polar solvent. Therefore, it is probably ionic. Next you have to pick up a chemical data book and look at melting points of ionic compounds to find one that has this melting point.
The incipient melting point refers to how metal is heated. It is the point just before the metal reaches its melting point.
The melting point of ultrapure water is 0 0C at 1 atm.
H2O is water. The melting point of water is 0oC or 32oF
The melting point and freezing point of water are physical properties.
there is no melting point of water it is already a liquid its 0 degrees Celsius
The melting point of water is zero degrees Celsius.
The melting point of water (ice) is 0 0C. The boiling point of water is 100 0C.
The melting point for carbon dioxide is 108.4 degrees Fahrenheit. The melting point for water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Water has a high melting point and boiling point because of hydrogen bonds
At standard pressure the melting (freezing) point of pure water is 0 0C.
Its melting point
The melting point of salt water is even lower than pure water.
You would need to look at a temperature / pressure graph