Your question makes no sense. What substance changes from one state of matter to another (that is the first part and makes sense)
at temperature and pressure experiencing earths surface?
What on earth does that mean? pressure experiencing earths surface?
What could it possibly mean? I really have no clue what you are trying to ask in the second part of the question. The first part however may give a clue to what you actually mean to ask. Maybe you mean "What substance changes from one state of matter to another at the temperature and pressure experienced on earths surface?"
But using that as the question, there are literally hundreds or even thousands of correct answers. Here are a few
Water, a liquid, changes to ice, a solid, and to steam, a gas and back to water
Iodine can change from its solid form to a gas
Ammonia can change from a liquid to a gas
Freon can change from a liquid to a gas
phosphorus can change from a solid to a gas
gasoline, ether, liquid petroleum gas, naphtha, acetone, acetate all change from a liquid to a gas at atmosphere pressure at earths surface.
Sodium changes from a solid to a gas.
Hope this helps answer your question.
Temperature and pressure are two factors that can cause a phase change in a substance. A substance will change from one phase to another when its temperature or pressure surpass a certain threshold, known as the melting point, boiling point, or sublimation point.
This is known as solubility. It refers to the maximum amount of a substance that can dissolve in a solvent at a specific temperature and pressure. It is an important property in chemistry for understanding how substances interact and form solutions.
Yes, by utilizing a physical property like temperature or pressure, you can change the state of matter of a substance. For example, increasing the temperature of ice (solid) will change it into water (liquid), or increasing the pressure on water vapor (gas) can change it into liquid water.
This is called a change in phase or a phase transition. It occurs when a substance transitions from one of the states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) to another due to changes in temperature or pressure.
The phase of a substance is dependent on several things. Most basically, the composition of the substance itself and the strength of the atomic interactions within the substance determine how the other factors will effect it. For example, these interactions determine that water is liquid and steel is solid at room temperature. Substances changing phase depends on the temperature and the pressure exerted on them. The higher the temperature, the closer a substance gets to a gaseous phase. The lower the pressure, the same. This is the reason why water boils at a lower temperature if you are at a significantly higher elevation: there is less pressure. An interesting concept which has cool applications is that of a "triple point." Use Google to find a graphic image, so you can more easily figure out what I am saying. The triple point is the place at which the three phases meet, and each substance has its own triple point at a unique temperature and pressure. Below this point in temperature, pressure, or both, a substance will skip the liquid phase entirely and go directly from a solid to a gas, as in the case of "dry ice."
solibility
The phase of matter a substance is in at atmospheric pressure is primarily dependent on its temperature. At a certain temperature, known as its boiling point, a substance will transition from a liquid to a gas. Conversely, at another temperature, known as its freezing point, a substance will transition from a liquid to a solid.
A combination of varying pressure and/or temperature.
Temperature and pressure are two factors that can cause a phase change in a substance. A substance will change from one phase to another when its temperature or pressure surpass a certain threshold, known as the melting point, boiling point, or sublimation point.
Temperature refers to the measure of thermal energy present in a substance, while the critical temperature is the specific temperature at which a substance transitions from one phase to another (such as from liquid to gas). The critical temperature is a unique property of a substance and is independent of pressure.
Close. Solubility is the ability of one substance to dissolve in another at a given temperature and pressure.
Change the temperature or pressure or both, to change a substance from one state to another. (such as gas to liquid)
This is known as solubility. It refers to the maximum amount of a substance that can dissolve in a solvent at a specific temperature and pressure. It is an important property in chemistry for understanding how substances interact and form solutions.
For a substance to change from one state of matter to another, energy must be added or removed to break or form intermolecular forces. The temperature and pressure conditions must also be appropriate for the desired state change to occur, such as melting, boiling, or freezing.
The PV phase diagram is important because it shows how a substance behaves at different pressure and temperature conditions. It helps us understand when a substance will change from one phase to another, such as from solid to liquid or liquid to gas. This information is crucial for predicting and controlling the behavior of substances in various environments.
Saturation refers to a state where a substance is holding the maximum amount of another substance that it can possibly hold. In chemistry, a solution is considered saturated when it cannot dissolve any more solute at a given temperature and pressure.
Something can boil by increasing the temperature of the substance until it reaches its boiling point, causing the liquid to evaporate and form bubbles. Another way to make something boil is by decreasing the surrounding pressure, which lowers the boiling point of the substance and allows it to boil at a lower temperature.