yes
condensationThis term is not only used for water, but for any gas that changes state into liquid.We often use the term in everyday speech as well as in technical contexts. For example, people talk about "condensation" on windows. This is atmospheric water vapor that has condensed on cool glass, becoming liquid.
Its a change in energy primarily. Water vapor loses energy and then becomes liquid. The energy it loses generally is heat. For example, Put water vapor in a sealed container in a freezer, it will change from vapor to liquid, then liquid to solid as it loses energy in the form of heat
The heat of vaporization for gold is 324 kJ·mol−1.
Condensation, when you heat water the water boils and lets of steam, steam collects around the water heater as condensation.
The molecules slow down due to a decrease in temperature, which means particles are packed more closely together, causing the water vapour to turn to liquid water. The particles in the water vapour are attracted to each other, condensing water vapour to turn to liquid water. Hope this helps :D!!
condensationThis term is not only used for water, but for any gas that changes state into liquid.We often use the term in everyday speech as well as in technical contexts. For example, people talk about "condensation" on windows. This is atmospheric water vapor that has condensed on cool glass, becoming liquid.
They are the same energy but relate to the processes in different directions. Condensation= gas-->liquid. Vaporization=liquid-->gas. One energy should be the negative of the other.
i think d...................... what you mean
condensationCondensation is where water vapor turns to liquid. The process is where gas turns to water then vapor and then turns back into liquid.
Water (the heat required to convert to steam is more than 500 times that required to raise liquid water's temp one degree.)
Evaporation is a type of vaporization of a liquid that occurs only on the surface of a liquid. The other type of vaporization is boiling, which, instead, occurs on the entire mass of the liquid.
Heat of Vaporization id the amount of heat needed to transform a liquid into a gas while not raising its temperature.
L can either mean the latent heat of vaporization or condensation. The latent heat of vaporization is the energy required to completely turn 1 kilogram of a liquid into a gas at its boiling point. The latent heat of condensation is the energy required to completely turn 1 kilogram of a solid into a liquid at its melting point.
Vaporization is the change of liquid water to water vapor. Vaporization requires addition of the latent heat of vaporization to liquid water. The latent heat of vaporization supplies the liquid water molecules with enough energy to become vapor molecules. The latent heat of vaporization at 1.0 atmosphere pressure is about 1000 Btu per lbm ( 2260 kJ per kg ).
Perspiration coats the outside of the skin with moisture (water). The water evaporates. Evaporation requires heat to be absorbed by the water (the latent heat of vaporization). Heat is removed from the body surface to provide the water with the latent heat of vaporization.
The water heat of vaporization is 40,65 kJ/mol.
When a substance is liquid and it changes to gas, we call that boiling.