The substance that boils first is determined by its boiling point, which is the temperature at which it transitions from a liquid to a gas. Generally, substances with lower boiling points will boil first when heated. For example, water boils at 100°C (212°F) at standard atmospheric pressure, while substances like ethanol boil at around 78°C (172°F), making ethanol boil first under the same conditions. The specific substance that boils first in a given scenario will depend on the mixture and the boiling points of the components involved.
Heat
Heat
Water is a substance that boils at 100 degrees Celsius and freezes at 0 degrees Celsius.
Because you are not changing the composition of the substance, boils is a physical property.
The state of matter just before a substance boils is typically a liquid. As the substance is heated, its temperature rises until it reaches the boiling point, at which point it starts vaporizing into a gas.
The boiling point of twice the amount of liquid will remain 150 degrees. The boiling point of a substance is determined by the chemical properties of the substance itself, rather than the quantity of the substance.
Intermolecular forces
boiling point.
Each liquid boils at a different temperature, but the temperature it boils at is called the Boiling Point. For example, the boiling point of water is 212 Fahrenheit.This specific temprature is dependant on the pressureon the liquid at that time, as an example at ahigher temperatures the boiling point is higher.
Of these three substances, water boils at the highest tempurature, followed by Oxygen, and then Hydrogen. (-252 < -184 < 100)
A substance has different phases, but it only boils at a certain temperature. If it is over that temperature it will evaporate or if it is under that temperature it won't boil.
When a hot enough object meets water, some of the water boils instantly. As any substance boils it expands.