You can add heat and cause liquid to gasify. Or you can decrease the pressure in the system and cause liquid to gasify. Note that you may gasify liquid and leave suspended or dissolved solids behind. More heat or pressure may be required to convert these remnants to liquid and then gas.
ok i need to know how heat effects liquids
You can change both of these by increasing or decreasing the speed of the molecules (kinetic energy), or by increasing or decreasing the heat applied (thermal energy). If you want to melt ice, you can increase the kinetic energy by increasing the thermal energy. The opposite occurs if you want to freeze water.
To calculate the final temperature of the liquid after adding the energy, we would need more information such as the specific heat capacity of the liquid. The change in temperature can be calculated using the formula Q = mcΔT, where Q is the energy added, m is the mass of the liquid, c is the specific heat capacity, and ΔT is the change in temperature. Once these values are known, we can determine the final temperature of the liquid.
Yes, condensation requires the removal of heat energy, as it is the process by which a gas changes to a liquid by losing heat. When water vapor in the air cools and loses energy, it condenses into liquid water droplets.
The three phase changes that require the input of thermal energy are melting, vaporization, and sublimation. Melting is the change from solid to liquid, vaporization is the change from liquid to gas, and sublimation is the change from solid to gas. In all these processes, thermal energy is needed to break the intermolecular forces holding the particles together.
No, totally independent
To change one state of matter to another, you need to either add or remove heat energy. For example, to change a solid to a liquid, you would need to add heat energy to melt the solid. Similarly, to change a liquid to a gas, you would need to add heat energy to evaporate the liquid.
Heat energy, usually. However, some substances will change states under the influence of UV or other radiation.AnswerThe energy needed to change a material from a solid to a liquid is called the 'latent heat of fusion', or just the 'heat of fusion'. It is equal to the amount of energy or heat given off by the same material to change it from a liquid back into a solid.Each material has its own heat of fusion. Take solid water (ice) at 0o Celsius, the freezing point. Water's heat of fusion is 79.71 calories per gram. That means that you will need to add 79.71 calories of heat to each gram of ice (solid water) to turn it into liquid water. Interestingly, once that's done, the water will still be at 0o Celsius! The heat was used just to change the water's state from solid to liquid. Once the ice is liquid, then any more heat added will increase the temperature of the liquid, and each calorie of heat will increase the water's temperature about 1o Celsius.This is a similar concept to a material's 'heat of vaporization', which is the amount of energy required to change a liquid to a gas.The amount of heat necessary to change a substance from a solid to a liquid or vice versa is commonly called the heat of fusion. It is more properly known as the standard enthalpy of fusion, or also the latent heat of fusion, or the enthalpy change of fusion. The specific temperature at which the change occurs is defined as the melting point of that substance. A link can be found below.The amount of energy a substance must absorb in order to change from a solid to a liquid is the heat of fusion. A change in which a system absorbs energy from its surroundings is endothermic change.
To change the state of matter of a substance, you need to either add or remove energy. Adding energy (e.g., heat) can change a substance from a solid to a liquid, or a liquid to a gas. Removing energy (e.g., cooling) can cause a gas to condense into a liquid, or a liquid to freeze into a solid.
Thermal (heat) energy must be added or removed in order to cause a change of state.
To change something from a solid to a liquid, you need to add heat energy to the solid. This process is called melting. As heat is applied, the solid's particles gain enough energy to overcome the forces holding them together in a rigid structure, allowing them to move more freely and change into a liquid state.
To change a solid to a liquid you need to add energy. The energy makes the molecules vibrate faster and they find it easier to break bonds holding them to the molecules directly next to them and form new bonds to other molecules.
ok i need to know how heat effects liquids
Sure. Other things being equal, you need more energy to raise the temperature of a larger mass of liquid.
You can change both of these by increasing or decreasing the speed of the molecules (kinetic energy), or by increasing or decreasing the heat applied (thermal energy). If you want to melt ice, you can increase the kinetic energy by increasing the thermal energy. The opposite occurs if you want to freeze water.
To calculate the final temperature of the liquid after adding the energy, we would need more information such as the specific heat capacity of the liquid. The change in temperature can be calculated using the formula Q = mcΔT, where Q is the energy added, m is the mass of the liquid, c is the specific heat capacity, and ΔT is the change in temperature. Once these values are known, we can determine the final temperature of the liquid.
Yes, condensation requires the removal of heat energy, as it is the process by which a gas changes to a liquid by losing heat. When water vapor in the air cools and loses energy, it condenses into liquid water droplets.