It's actually a lot simpler than that. When liquid water boils, some of the water molecules in a liquid state become so energetic that they go into a gaseous state. They remain water molecules, completely unchanged in their internal composition. They just change how they relate to other molecules. The only "gas" that's released during boiling is water vapor.
As such, you can reheat the same water a thousand times and you won't get any change in the boiling process (other than loss of the liquid as the water vapor wisps away). The water molecules in a liquid state will become water molecules in a gaseous state, and the process will be the same on the first, second, and thousandth time.
What_will_happen_to_water_molecules_when_water_boils
All the water molecules will start separating and will spread.
The water molecules will split
Liquid water molecules are transformed in gaseous water molecules.
kinetic energy
Whe you boil water, molecules of water "escape" into the atmosphere. The molecular structure of water is unaffected by boiling.
once the molecules evaporates or boils that there would be less of an amount of the component in the solution.
When water boils, the entire volume of water can produce vapor. In contrast, when water evaporates, only molecules at the surface can escape into the gas phase.
When matter is heated the molecules move faster and the speed becomes so great the molecules cannot hold together. The molecules fly apart and become a gas.
Steam is water molecules in vapor form
IT BOILS, what kind of question is this?
kinetic energy
Whe you boil water, molecules of water "escape" into the atmosphere. The molecular structure of water is unaffected by boiling.
No, when water boils it evaporates into single water molecules. We can see the cooler of these as they condense into steam. Steam or water vapour is the water molecules re-condensing into water droplets.
No, when water boils it evaporates into single water molecules. We can see the cooler of these as they condense into steam. Steam or water vapour is the water molecules re-condensing into water droplets.
no it is the molecules in the water moving fast and bumping into each other
alcohal will vaporised
once the molecules evaporates or boils that there would be less of an amount of the component in the solution.
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)