Compare the melting and freezing of water in terms is (a) the temperature at which these processes take place and (b) how energy is involved in these processes
Answers
Water can exist as a solid (ice), liquid (water) or gas (vapour or gas). Adding heat can cause ice (a solid) to melt to form water (a liquid). Removing heat causes water (a liquid) to freeze to form ice (a solid). When water changes to a solid or a gas, we say it changes to a different state of matter. Even though the water’s physical form changes, its molecules stay the same.
Water is a molecule
A molecule is a group of two or more atoms that bond or ‘stick’ together. Water is a molecule. It is made up of two hydrogen (H) atoms and one oxygen (O) atom that are chemically bonded together. The H and O are symbols for the atoms that make up water. This is why people often refer to water as H2O. Water can change from a liquid to a solid or a gas and back to a liquid, but its molecules always stay the same. A water molecule is always H2O whether it is liquid water, ice or water vapour.