They break up into individual molecules (or ions) and diffuse throughout the liquid.
Melting is a physical process where a solid turns into a liquid when heat is applied, such as ice melting into water. Dissolving is a chemical or physical process where a solid substance disperses uniformly in a liquid to form a solution, like sugar dissolving in water.
You question makes no sense. If particles dissolve they go into solution, they do not "break apart and scatter".
Yes anthracene is a substance that can sublime.
A suspension is a mixture of water and a non-dissolved material.answerA mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy ora suspension is a heterogeneous fluid containing solid particles that are sufficiently large for sedimentation.
Evaporation.
To melt is to go from solid form to a liquid state. To dissolve is to disintegrate, or terminate.
Melting is a physical process where a solid turns into a liquid when heat is applied, such as ice melting into water. Dissolving is a chemical or physical process where a solid substance disperses uniformly in a liquid to form a solution, like sugar dissolving in water.
You mean if a substance can go from solid to liquid? Of course, take the ice cubes out of the freezer and you'll see it happening. Do you mean that when such process occurs, does the substance changes? No, only the grouping and movement of particles in it.
During sublimation, particles will speed up. Sublimation is the transition of a substance to go from a solid to a gas without going through the liquid phase.
During melting, a solid substance changes into its liquid state, with an increase in thermal energy causing the particles to overcome the forces holding them in a fixed position within the solid lattice structure. This results in a break in the orderly arrangement of particles, leading to a more disordered arrangement in the liquid state.
You question makes no sense. If particles dissolve they go into solution, they do not "break apart and scatter".
When a substance is heated, the energy is absorbed by the substance's particles, causing them to move faster and increase in temperature. This energy can be used to break intermolecular bonds and change the substance's phase, such as melting a solid into a liquid or boiling a liquid into a gas.
The particles of that solute go into the empty spaces around the water particles.
When anything is cooled its particles move more slowly.
When you remove kinetic energy from a substance, its particles slow down. If enough kinetic energy is removed, the substance may transition from a gas to a liquid or a solid, depending on the substance.
random -- the particles go about in a random fashion in a liquid -- cannot predict which direction a molecule of the liquid will hit the particle in the next period of time of significance (seconds or minutes).
Increasing the temperature of a solvent speeds up the movement of its particles. This increase cause more solvent particles to bump into the solute. As a result, solute particles break loose and dissolve faster.Temperature often affects solubility rates. Endothermic stuff tends to go faster in warm, and exothermic stuff tends to go faster in cool.