effect of pressure on the melting point of ice in le chatlier principal
Answers
Answered by
5
Answer:
The imposed step change in the volume is accompanied by an increase in the system pressure; the new volume is fixed, but the system pressure can adjust. The principle asserts that the system will respond by decreasing its pressure. The system pressure will decrease if some of the ice melts. Melting ice consumes heat.
Answered by
1
Answer:
About the volume concept , that's actually the concept of Le Chatelier's principle that if you increase pressure on a system, the system will shift in the direction of decreasing volume. ... That's why the melting point increases as the pressure increase.
Similar questions