Evaporation
(noun)
A type of vaporization of a liquid that only occurs on the liquid's surface.
Examples of Evaporation in the following topics:
-
Liquid to Gas Phase Transition
- There are two types of vaporization: evaporation and boiling.
- Evaporation occurs at temperatures below the boiling point, and occurs on the liquid's surface.
- If the vapor pressure of the drop is greater than the partial pressure of vapor in the gas phase, the drop will evaporate.
- Non-polar molecules (gray) evaporate or boil more quickly than polar molecules (blue and red).
- This video looks at how vaporization and evaporation happens, and it addresses a big mistake that many people make when they deal with the liquid gas phase transition.
-
Vapor Pressure of Nonelectrolyte Solutions
- A substance that evaporates quickly has high vapor pressure and is referred to as a volatile substance.
- By definition, a non-volatile substance does not evaporate.
- In a pure solvent, all of the liquid molecules on the surface can evaporate and transition to the gaseous phase.
-
Solid to Gas Phase Transition
- For some substances, such as carbon and arsenic, sublimation is much easier than evaporation.
- Even ice has a measurable vapor pressure near its freezing point, as evidenced by the tendency of snow to evaporate in cold dry weather.
-
Boiling Point Elevation
- The lower number of solvent molecules at the surface means that fewer will evaporate, and thus the vapor pressure is lowered.
-
Millikan's Oil Drop Experiment
- Ordinary oil would evaporate under the heat of the light source, causing the mass of the oil drop to change over the course of the experiment.
-
Properties of Nitrogen
- Directing a pressurized stream of nitrogen gas perpendicular to the surface of the liquid allows the solvent to evaporate while leaving the solute(s) and unevaporated solvent behind.
-
Properties of Phosphorus
- Another form, scarlet phosphorus, is obtained by allowing a solution of white phosphorus in carbon disulfide to evaporate in sunlight.
-
Three States of Matter
- This process of a liquid changing to a gas is called evaporation.
-
Molecular Crystals
- Molecular solids tend to be soft or deformable, have low melting points, and are often sufficiently volatile to evaporate directly into the gas phase.