Science, asked by gajananm199, 1 year ago

Explain the concept of Regelation...

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Answers

Answered by tanveer73
2

plz go through text book of science


gajananm199: I read it but can't get it....
tanveer73: ok
tanveer73: concentrate yaar
tanveer73: regelation is when u apply force the materials starts to melt just as the string that applied force on the ice it started melting when the force was released it start to freeze in that way the string passes the ice without break in ice
Answered by rishabh2328
4

✨Dear student here is your answer

Regelation is the phenomenon of melting under pressure and refreezing when the pressure is reduced. Many sources state that regelation can be demonstrated by looping a fine wire around a block of ice, with a heavy weight attached to it. The pressure exerted on the ice slowly melts it locally, permitting the wire to pass through the entire block. The wire's track will refill as soon as pressure is relieved, so the ice block will remain solid even after wire passes completely through. This experiment is possible for ice at −10 °C or cooler, and while essentially valid, the details of the process by which the wire passes through the ice are complex. The phenomenon works best with high thermal conductivity materials such as copper, since latent heat of fusion from the top side needs to be transferred to the lower side to supply latent heat of melting.In short, the phenomenon in which ice converts to liquid due to applied pressure and then re-converts to ice once the pressure is removed is called regelation.

Regelation was discovered by Michael Faraday. It occurs only for substances such as ice, that have the property of expanding upon freezing, for the melting points of those substances decrease with the increasing external pressure. The melting point of ice falls by 0.0072 °C for each additional atm of pressure applied. For example, a pressure of 500 atmospheres is needed for ice to melt at −4 °C.

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