Methanol, also known as methyl alcohol CH40, is the simplest alcohol and is light, volatile, colorless, flammable liquid.
It has a boiling point of 64.7 C = 148.4 F = 337.8 K, at standard pressure.
The boiling point of Methylated spirit is 78.5 degrees Celsius
64 degrees Celsius
−97 °C, −142.9 °F (176 K)
40 degrees Celsius
there is no boiling point
the boiling point of lemonade is 112 C
How high is high? The boiling temperature depends on the pressure of the atmosphere above the liquid. The higher you go the lower is the atmospheric pressure, and so the boiling temperature. Methanol boils at 64.7°C (148.4°F) at 760mmHg, about sea level.
The melting point of tantalum is 3 017 0C.The boiling point of tantalum is 5 458 0C (this is a very high boiling point).
Wood alcohol (methanol) freezes at -97.8° C (-144.0° F) and boils at 64.7° C (148.5°F)Grain alcohol (ethanol) freezes at -114.1° C (-173.4° F) and boils at 78.5° C (173.3° F)
methanol
The boiling point of methanol is lower than the boiling point of ethanol.
Methanol has the following boiling points: 64.7°C, 338K and 148°F
Methanol
Condensation point is the same as boiling point of methanol: 65 °C, 338 K, 149 °F
Methenol does not exist, at least not in chemistry;However , if it is a misspelling of methanol (CH3OH, spelled with 'a') the boiling point is 65 °C, 338 K, 149 °F
Ethanol boiling point: 78.37 °C Methanol Boiling point: 64.7 °C Acetone Boiling point: 56 to 57 °C dichloromethane Boiling Point: 39.8-40.0°C Water Boiling Point: 100°C dichloromethane more volatile than the others
The boiling point of methyl alcohol (methanol) is 64.7oC.
is this question right framed? Is it like " What is the boiling point of methanol at different pressure?" How anybody can understand that Boiling point temperature at different temperatures.
You can either pressurize it or add to it another liquid with a lower boiling point.
Heptane has 7 carbon atoms. So it has a greater surface area than methanol. Therefor heptane has a higher boiling point.In general, all else being equal the higher the molecular weight, the higher the boiling point. The molecular weight of methanol is 32, the molecular weight of heptane is 100. So, ignoring everything but that, you'd expect heptane to have a higher boiling point than methanol.A better question might be "why is the boiling point of methanol so much higher than that of ethane, which has a similar molecular weight (30)?" The answer to that is hydrogen bonding.
Methanol and ethanol mix together well in part because they both have a low boiling point. Methanol and ethanol mixed together also metabolizes well.