No.
There are liquids that boil at a few degrees above absolute zero (helium for example) and liquids that boil at several thousand degrees above absolute zero (tungsten for example)
yes
no
Liquids expand more than solids on heating
These liquids have different chemical composition and structure.
All liquids have different boiling point (BP). It's one of the must important characteristics of liquids. You can distinguish and also separate a mixture of liquids by boiling off one with a lower BP. The BP of every liquid depends upon the attractive forces among the atoms or molecules of the material such as hydrogen bonds, dipole attraction, London forces, etc....
All juices if they are fully liquid (and 0 percent thick) can evaporate
Yes. It's the principle on which fractional distillation works. As you heat the mixture, it will first start to boil at the lower of the two liquids boiling points, and that liquid will boil off while the temperature of the mixture will remain constant. After the first liquid is boiled off, the temperature of the remaining fluid will then start to rise till it reaches it's boiling point. The second liquid will then start to boil.
No.
No, not all liquids boil at 100 degrees Celsius. Water boils at 100 degrees C.
Liquids expand more than solids on heating
Decreasing the pressure -APEX
Distillation.
Boil it
These liquids have different chemical composition and structure.
Actually, you can boil liquids, and cotton is not a liquid. If you apply heat to cotton, it would burn before it would boil.
Heat can make water boil, like when you put a pot of water on the stove on high!
Liquids have different forms because when they get above a certain temperature the could boil or freeze.
Uses of the Florence flask: - to contain liquids - to boil liquids - to realize chemical reactions
yes they can like water if you remove all the pressure form a vial and have water in it the water will boil at room temp. while if you add pressure to water it is harder to boil.