Absolutely. Try an experiment of boiling a pan of water on a stove in the kitchen. If you have 1 liter of water in the pan and boil it dry until the water has all gone, the volume of steam produced will fill the house.
To calculate the volume of water boiled off, you need to know the initial volume of water, the heat input, the time it was heated, and the specific heat capacity of water. You can use the equation Q = mcΔT, where Q is the heat energy, m is the mass of water, c is the specific heat capacity of water, and ΔT is the change in temperature. Once you have the heat energy, you can convert it to volume using the density of water.
No, it is a physical change.
Oh, dude, when you boil water, it turns into steam, right? So, like, the volume of water actually increases because it expands as it gets all hot and bothered. It's like water's version of puffing out its chest and saying, "Look at me now, I'm steam, baby!"
Boiling water is a physical change, not a chemical change. The water molecules remain the same chemical composition (H2O) even though they change state from a liquid to a gas. This change is reversible.
The volume of water is likely to decrease after boiling for thirty minutes due to evaporation. Some of the water molecules will turn into vapor and escape into the air, reducing the overall volume of water in the pan.
No the volume of the egg shell doesn't
No the volume of the egg shell doesn't
To calculate the volume of water boiled off, you need to know the initial volume of water, the heat input, the time it was heated, and the specific heat capacity of water. You can use the equation Q = mcΔT, where Q is the heat energy, m is the mass of water, c is the specific heat capacity of water, and ΔT is the change in temperature. Once you have the heat energy, you can convert it to volume using the density of water.
The volume of water decrease.
No, it is a physical change.
Water changes from a liquid phase to a gaseous phase when it is boiled.
Oh, dude, when you boil water, it turns into steam, right? So, like, the volume of water actually increases because it expands as it gets all hot and bothered. It's like water's version of puffing out its chest and saying, "Look at me now, I'm steam, baby!"
Yes, water evaporates when boiled. Boiling water causes it to change from a liquid to a gas, resulting in evaporation.
Boiling is a physical change.
No, it is a physical change because the water is the same but just boiled
Boiling water is a physical change, not a chemical change. The water molecules remain the same chemical composition (H2O) even though they change state from a liquid to a gas. This change is reversible.
Boiling is a physical phenomenon, a change of phase.