Water both in the solid (ice) and liquid (water) state, can undergo evaporation when at any temperature.
At STP water boils at 100 degrees C.
Hydrogen bonding is the intermolecular force responsible for water being a liquid at room temperature. The hydrogen bonds between water molecules are relatively strong, allowing them to remain in a liquid state rather than vaporizing at room temperature.
When water is heated steadily, its temperature will stop rising when it reaches its boiling point and starts to convert into vapor. This process is known as boiling and occurs at a specific temperature depending on air pressure.
There is no such temperature to start evaporating. Even in the room temperature or in a refrigerator, water does evaporate. When a particular water molecule absorbs adequate energy (let's say from heat), there will be a phasechange in that molecule from liquid to gas, and it's called evaporation.
At 212 degrees Fahrenheit, water starts to boil and convert into steam. This temperature is known as the boiling point of water at standard atmospheric pressure.
Fullerene C60 can be made by vaporizing graphite in a high-temperature electric arc and then collecting the resulting soot, which contains C60 molecules.
Evaporation occur at any temperature.
Hydrogen bonding is the intermolecular force responsible for water being a liquid at room temperature. The hydrogen bonds between water molecules are relatively strong, allowing them to remain in a liquid state rather than vaporizing at room temperature.
Water temperature rises, ice (solid water) starts melting and becomes liquid, liquid starts boiling becoming vapor.
Water temperature rises, ice (solid water) starts melting and becomes liquid, liquid starts boiling becoming vapor.
When water is heated steadily, its temperature will stop rising when it reaches its boiling point and starts to convert into vapor. This process is known as boiling and occurs at a specific temperature depending on air pressure.
It rose to 100 degrees Celsius. The water starts to evaporate?
The state of matter just before a substance boils is typically a liquid. As the substance is heated, its temperature rises until it reaches the boiling point, at which point it starts vaporizing into a gas.
yes because temperature is factor that starts the water cycle by evaporating the water so it can become a rain cloud and do the rest of the water cycle
The temperature at which vapor starts to condense is called the dew point temperature. This is the temperature at which the air becomes saturated with water vapor and condensation begins to form.
70 degree Celsius is qiute a high temperature. in this temperature, the water molecules starts escaping which results in the vapourisation of water.
That's going to depend on what temperature the water starts from.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius so, technically yes