When water is heated and turns into a gas, it forms water vapor.
Eventually if heated long enough (and hot enough) all the water would either eat the world or MELT (turning into steam), leaving behind nothing but solid salt behind. This is one way that you can remove salt from sea water in fact.
Barium chloride is white in its solid form. When heated, it remains white because its color does not change.
Zinc oxide
When FeSO4·7H2O is heated strongly, it loses its water molecules and forms anhydrous FeSO4. The color changes from blue to white or pale green due to the removal of water molecules, and the compound becomes anhydrous iron(II) sulfate (FeSO4).
When copper sulfate crystals are heated, they lose their water of hydration and turn into anhydrous copper sulfate, which is a white powder. The color change from blue to white signifies the removal of water molecules.
It turns cloudy white.
When blue copper sulphate is heated, it loses water molecules and converts to anhydrous copper sulfate, which is white in color. The blue color of copper sulfate is due to the presence of water molecules in its crystal structure.
When copper sulfate is heated the observation is that it turns white as the water which is driven off by the heat. It is also stated that the white solid will remain and if water is added to the anhydrous copper sulfate a reaction will occur.
If a solid is heated to give off carbon dioxide and water, it must contain at carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms. One such substance is the bicarbonate ion, which is formed from hydrogen and water with the loss of a proton. In fact, when salts of this ion are sufficiently heated, they decompose to water and carbon dioxide.
The blue copper (2) sulfate is undergoing a reversible reaction. When heated, it forms a white solid (copper (2) oxide) and water. When water is added to the white solid, it forms the original blue copper (2) sulfate, releasing heat, indicating an exothermic reaction.
Yes, fluoride can evaporate from water when it is heated.
Hydrous copper sulphate, when heated, turns into anhydrous copper sulphate and changes its color from blue to white. The blue color comes from the water molecules bound to the copper sulphate crystals, and when heated, these water molecules are removed, resulting in a color change.
When water is heated and turns into a gas, it forms water vapor.
Water heated to a gas is eiher called water vapor or steam.
When water is heated, it can turn into steam, which is essentially water vapor.
When hydrated ferrous sulfate is heated, it loses its water molecules and undergoes thermal decomposition. The color change is from pale green (hydrated) to white (anhydrous).