vaporization point of steam
The condensation point of water is the temperature at which water vapor transitions into liquid water. This occurs when the vapor molecules lose enough energy to come together and form liquid droplets. The condensation point of water at standard atmospheric pressure is 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit).
No, temperature remains constant during the process of condensation. As a gas cools and transitions to a liquid state, the temperature stays the same until all the gas has condensed into a liquid.
AnswerSteamAdded:Steam causes more severe burns as compared to boiling water because steam contains more heat (i.e 40.6 kJ/mol condensation heat) then boiling water, both at the same temperature 100 oC.From that condensation is momentanous when in contact with skin, after being liquefied it behaves the same as boiling water: still 100 oC and cooling down is slower than condensation.
Condensation is the process by which a gas changes into a liquid, typically due to cooling. Cooling is the reduction of temperature in an object or substance. While condensation often involves cooling, they are not exactly the same process.
Phase change of gas to liquid is cooling and is named as 'Condensation'. At the same temperature if the phase change is from liquid to gas then it is boiling point. Correspondingly for liquid to solid it is freezing point And from from solid to liquid it is melting point.
No, Gas--->liquid (condensation). Solid---->liquid (melting)
No,Steam are formed by boiling it at the boiling point and the steam is white smoke that comes out of it.Mist are formed when the temperature becomes cold the water vapor gas goes into the process called condensation and turn into little droplets of liquid.
They are the same.
The boiling point. The process is condensation, but condensation and boiling occur at the same temperature since the boiling point represents the temperature at which gas and liquid are in equilibrium with each other.
If you use saturated steam, the main source of the heat is provided by the condensation of the steam at a constant temperature. The energy provided by the condensing steam is significantly more than what you can get from just changing the temperature of superheated steam. When the temperature remains constant, design calculations are also a lot easier; the temperatures stay the same (or almost the same) for the steam along the entire run and the pressure stays the same (or almost the same).
No, salt does not affect the temperature of steam. Adding salt to water increases the boiling point of the water, but once the water has turned into steam, the temperature of the steam remains the same.
Condensation does not have a specific freezing point as it is the process by which vapor turns into a liquid when it cools. However, condensation can lead to the formation of ice when the temperature drops below freezing.
Condensation
No, increasing the boiling point of water with additives does not increase the temperature of the vapor or steam produced. The temperature of the vapor or steam will remain the same as it is determined by the boiling point of water, regardless of any additives.
The vaporization temperature (liquid to gas) is the same temperature as the condensation temperature (gas to liquid). In advanced engineering this may not be technically true however, since the condensation temperature can be significantly lower than the vaporization temperature in very controlled circumstances (subcooled gases, subcooled liquids).
Melting point. The temperature at which a substance freezes is the same as its melting point, as this is the temperature at which a solid substance transitions into a liquid state.
Condensation point is the same as boiling point of methanol: 65 °C, 338 K, 149 °F