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Posted

I always wonder why this happens...

 

if I place a cup of water on the table, after a very long time, the water is gone...

 

why's that? why doesn't it remain liquid water?

Posted

because there is energy in the air. It takes 1 cal. of energy to evaporate 1 gram of water. If you're not adding heat, then it takes longer to evaporate, energy is being transfered much slower.

Posted

well,.

 

boiling point indicates the amount of heat to change water from liquid into gas...

 

I think evaporating is the same....

 

any help here?

Posted

Nope. The boiling point is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the atmospheric pressure.

Posted

At room temperature vapor pressure is much lower than atmospheric presuure, thus the liquid (call it water :) ) evaporates only on the surface. Once the liquid is heated to the boiling temperature, it can evaporate not only on the surface, but also inside of its volume, That's the difference between evaporating and boiling.

 

Best,

Borek

--

Chemical calculators at www.chembuddy.com

pH calculator

concentration conversion

Posted

The molecules have a distribution of energies. Some fraction will have enough to escape; this lowers the average energy of the remaining molecules, which is why evaporation is a cooling process.

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