Chemistry, asked by sunnydhanjal, 8 months ago

Account for the observation that at the melting point, even though heat is being constantly supplied, the temperature does not rise till all the solid(ice) has changed into liquid.

Answers

Answered by Sumitnegi58
1

Answer:

ANSWER

ANSWERWhen heat is supplied to a solid, say ice, it starts melting. But temperature does not rise even after continuous supply of heat until all ice melts. The extra heat supplied, is used in melting of ice, which is called latent heat of fusion.

ANSWERWhen heat is supplied to a solid, say ice, it starts melting. But temperature does not rise even after continuous supply of heat until all ice melts. The extra heat supplied, is used in melting of ice, which is called latent heat of fusion.Similarly, when a liquid, say water, starts boiling the temperature of water does not rise instead of continuous supply of heat. The extra heat supplied to the boiling water is used in the vaporisation of water, which is known as latent heat of vaporisation.

ANSWERWhen heat is supplied to a solid, say ice, it starts melting. But temperature does not rise even after continuous supply of heat until all ice melts. The extra heat supplied, is used in melting of ice, which is called latent heat of fusion.Similarly, when a liquid, say water, starts boiling the temperature of water does not rise instead of continuous supply of heat. The extra heat supplied to the boiling water is used in the vaporisation of water, which is known as latent heat of vaporisation.That’s why, the temperature of a substance remains constant during its melting or boiling point.

Similar questions