When water is heated above 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit it boils, turning from a liquid into a gas (steam). So, when it falls below this temperature it changes back into a liquid. A condenser is a chamber like device where a gas is allowed to cool (in this case steam), as it cools below 100 degrees Celsius it becomes water again.
NOTE: The temperature at which water turns into a gas (boils) or changes back to water (condenses) is different depending on the atmospheric pressure of the area it's in. 100 degrees C is the boiling point at one atmosphere pressure or the normal air pressure around you at sea level.
A condenser is generally an object made from glass, used to condense a gas to a liquid.
Assuming you mean condenser, in an automobile ac system the condenser is used to condense vapor into liquid.
The apparatus is called a condenser. It cools the hot vapor produced during distillation, causing it to condense back into liquid form, which can then be collected.
Condenser use to condense the liquid for e.g: seperation of an emulsion by condensing the liquid & form different layer of oil & water &more dense liquid willlie at the bottom by that we can seperate the liquid. ;-)
A condenser cools down the vapor by passing it through a system of pipes that is in contact with a cooler medium, such as air or water. This cooling causes the vapor to lose heat energy and condense into a liquid state. The liquid is then collected for further processing or use.
Condenses vapours of liquids so they condense back to liquid. They are composed of a tube carrying the vapour with a water jacket around it through which cold water can pass
The purpose of a condenser in distillation is to cool and condense the vaporized substances back into liquid form, allowing for separation and collection of the desired components.
A water jacketed condenser in distillation works by cooling the vaporized substance from the distillation process using water flowing through a jacket surrounding the condenser. This cooling causes the vapor to condense back into a liquid form, which can then be collected as the distillate.
Water typically cools to around room temperature (20-25°C) when passing through a Liebig condenser, which is a type of water-cooled condenser used in laboratory settings to cool hot vapors and condense them back into liquid form.
The function of a condenser in a chemical reaction is to cool and condense vapors back into liquid form, allowing for the separation and collection of desired products or byproducts.
The purpose of a condenser in a chemistry experiment is to cool and condense vapors back into liquid form, allowing for the separation and collection of different components in a mixture.
The condenser in distillation works by cooling the vaporized liquid, turning it back into a liquid state. It does this by exposing the vapor to a cold surface, such as a tube or coil, which causes the vapor to lose heat and condense. This condensed liquid is then collected as the distillate.