A toxic volatile liquid can easily vaporize into the air, increasing the risk of inhalation and exposure to larger areas. This can lead to quicker absorption into the body and potentially result in more severe health effects compared to a non-volatile liquid that remains more localized and less likely to become airborne.
Someliquidshavetendencyto to get turned intovapor form at normal room temperature and pressure.Our cloths became dry due to escape of water molecules in air. Hot and dry air make water more volatile. Gasoline (petrol)is volatile as it rapidly turn into vapor andkerosene is not. Alcohol is also volatile. In high altitude, due to less atmospheric pressure all these becomes more volatile. Higher the boiling point, less volatile the substance is.
Toxic and poison are often used interchangeably, but technically toxic refers to things that can cause harm through contact or ingestion, while poison specifically refers to substances that are harmful when ingested, inhaled, or absorbed. The danger of each depends on the specific substance and the level of exposure.
Liquids that evaporate quickly are called Volatile Liquids. The word "volatile" is a physics term meaning, "evaporating or vaporizing readily under normal conditions". See the related links for more information.
Water is more volatile than sodium chloride because it has a lower boiling point. Volatility refers to how easily a substance changes from a liquid to a gas at a lower temperature.
Yes, ethylene is more volatile than ethane. This is because ethylene has a lower boiling point (-103.7°C) and vapor pressure compared to ethane, making it easier for ethylene to transition from liquid to gas at lower temperatures.
Volatile liquids require less temperature for easy evaporation compared to non-volatile liquids. This is because volatile liquids have lower boiling points and higher vapor pressure, making them more likely to evaporate even at lower temperatures.
Ammonia is a pungent colorless liquid. Acetone is a colourless, pungent and volatile liquid. Benzene is a colourless, pungent and volatile liquid.Chloroform is a colourless, pungent and volatile liquid. Diethyl Ether is a colourless, pungent and volatile liquid. Hydrogen Cyanide is a colourless, pungent and volatile liquid. Toluene is a colourless, pungent and volatile liquid.See the Web Links to the left for more information about ammonia, acetone, benzene, chloroform, diethyl ether, hydrogen cyanide andtoluene.
Gas is far more dangerous, it ignites at a much lower temperature, emits fumes that are even more volatile, burns very rapidly and is difficult to extinguish.
Viscous means how thick a LIQUID is and how tightly the particles are packed together if the liquid is thick(less runny) it is more viscous if the liquid is thin(more runny) it is less viscous
Someliquidshavetendencyto to get turned intovapor form at normal room temperature and pressure.Our cloths became dry due to escape of water molecules in air. Hot and dry air make water more volatile. Gasoline (petrol)is volatile as it rapidly turn into vapor andkerosene is not. Alcohol is also volatile. In high altitude, due to less atmospheric pressure all these becomes more volatile. Higher the boiling point, less volatile the substance is.
Toxic and poison are often used interchangeably, but technically toxic refers to things that can cause harm through contact or ingestion, while poison specifically refers to substances that are harmful when ingested, inhaled, or absorbed. The danger of each depends on the specific substance and the level of exposure.
Liquids that evaporate quickly are called Volatile Liquids. The word "volatile" is a physics term meaning, "evaporating or vaporizing readily under normal conditions". See the related links for more information.
Liquid that has a high boiling point. A liquid that releases molecules as a vapor.
The simple answer is "volatile" means - evaporates qucker.... In more detail though, volatile liquids have high vapor pressures at the existing conditions than non-volatile liquids. Because they have high vapor pressures, if the gas they are in contact with (usually the atmosphere is the gas of interest) is not already saturated with the vapor of the liquid, there is a stronger driving force for moving from the liquid to gas phase, i.e. to move toward equilibrium, than for a non-volatile liquid. Rates of evaporation and diffusion of the vapor away from the surface of the liquid can actually be written in terms of the difference in Gibbs Free energy in the liquid and vapor phases of the volatile substance - although such exercises in non-equilibrium thermodynamics are generally limited to a pretty small group of people doing research along those lines.
NO. actually vaporized lead would be even more dangerous.
Water is more volatile than sodium chloride because it has a lower boiling point. Volatility refers to how easily a substance changes from a liquid to a gas at a lower temperature.
Ethylamine is more volatile than methylamine.