No, boiling points are always higher than melting points. When you turn a solid to a liquid, this process is called melting, and requires a lower temperature than boiling the substance. Take ice water for example. Ice becomes pure water at 0oC. The temperature needed to boil pure water is 100oC, which is a bigger number than zero.
yes, for the same molecule. However, some substances don't have a liquid phase and so the melting point is exactly the same as the boiling point at normal pressures (sublimation is the phase change from solid -> gas)
The boiling point is always higher than the melting point.
Melting point: the temperature at which a solid become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature at which a liquid become a gas.
A boiling point is a point on the temperature scale at which a substance begins to boil. A melting point is a point on the temperature scale at which a substance freezes. Melting and boiling points are unique to different types of elements.
The structure of a compound will dictate what intermolecular forces hold the molecules together. The stronger these forces, the higher will be the boiling point.
IMF (intermolecular forces) affect the boiling and melting points of a substance by influencing the strength of the bonds between molecules. Stronger IMFs lead to higher boiling and melting points because more energy is required to overcome these forces. Weaker IMFs result in lower boiling and melting points as less energy is needed to break the intermolecular interactions.
Melting and boiling points are higher when intermolecular forces (such as hydrogen bonding, dipole-dipole interactions, or London dispersion forces) are stronger. These forces hold molecules together, so more energy is required to overcome them and change the state of the substance. Conversely, weaker intermolecular forces result in lower melting and boiling points.
yes, for the same molecule. However, some substances don't have a liquid phase and so the melting point is exactly the same as the boiling point at normal pressures (sublimation is the phase change from solid -> gas)
The boiling point is always higher than the melting point.
Ionic compounds generally have higher melting and boiling points.
Boiling Point 27.07 K Melting Point 24.56 K
Melting point: the temperature at which a solid become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature at which a liquid become a gas.
Elements have fixed melting and boiling points, while compounds have varying melting and boiling points depending on their composition. Mixtures do not have fixed melting and boiling points, as they are composed of multiple substances which each have their own individual melting and boiling points.
Melting point 28.5°C Boiling point 690°C
Boiling point 58.78°C Melting point 7.2°C
Melting point 113.5°C Boiling point 184.35°C
No, different liquids have different boiling and melting points depending on their chemical composition. The boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid turns into a gas, while the melting point is the temperature at which a solid turns into a liquid. Each liquid has its own unique set of physical properties that determine its specific boiling and melting points.