The liquid has the same mass but less volume than the ice.
Usually, a liquid is less dense than a solid, so when a solid melts its volume increases. However, this is not true for water or water-based liquids, because the H bonds make liquid water highly structured and therefore denser than expected.
When ice melts, it transforms from a solid to a liquid state. Ice has a lower density than liquid water due to its crystalline structure, which creates more space between molecules. As ice melts, it occupies less volume because the molecules come closer together in the liquid state. This results in a decrease in volume when ice turns into water.
It melts into liquid (water)
Ice actually expands as it melts, which is why a floating iceberg will raise the water level as it melts. This is because water molecules in solid ice are locked in a crystal lattice structure, which becomes more disordered and takes up more space as the ice melts into liquid water.
The volume of water will still be 250 mL once the ice melts. The ice will melt into water, but the total volume of the container will remain the same.
Usually, a liquid is less dense than a solid, so when a solid melts its volume increases. However, this is not true for water or water-based liquids, because the H bonds make liquid water highly structured and therefore denser than expected.
When ice melts, it transforms from a solid to a liquid, which results in a decrease in volume. The molecules in the solid ice are packed more tightly than in the liquid water, leading to a lower volume when the ice melts.
5 mL of water vapor would occupy significantly less volume as a liquid. All gasses occupy more space than their liquid counterparts as the extra energy of gaseous states drive the molecules further apart.
The volume of a beaker doesn't change, it's a beaker. What your were probably trying to ask is what happens to the volume of the ice when it melts. The volume decreases; water is special. Unlike other substances when it freezes it expands. That is why ice floats, it is less dense then water.
Water liquid melts faster because denisty of juice is more compared to water. Hence the Water liquid melts sooner.
1g water vapour occupies the greatest volume - even at high pressure. 1g of liquid water occupies the least volume. 1g of solid ice is greater volume than liquid water - and this is the only common liquid where the solid is of less volume than the liquid state.
Yes the volume of ice changes when the ice melts. In fact the volume of ice goes on increasing up to 0 degree Celsius and when the ice melts completely the volume of ice decreases on the contrary. Yes because when ice freezes, it expands and when it melts, it gets smaller.
The water level remains the same after the ice cube melts because the volume of the ice cube is already accounted for in the water level when it is frozen. When the ice melts, it simply changes state from solid to liquid without changing the overall volume in the glass.
Water vapor occupies about 1700 times more volume than liquid water. So, if you changed all the water in a pressure cooker to water vapor, the volume occupied by the water vapor would be about 1700 times the volume of the liquid water.
When ice melts, it transforms from a solid to a liquid state. Ice has a lower density than liquid water due to its crystalline structure, which creates more space between molecules. As ice melts, it occupies less volume because the molecules come closer together in the liquid state. This results in a decrease in volume when ice turns into water.
The answer would depend on the pressure attained by the cooker.
Liquid phase: liquid water