Chemistry, asked by samantaasebastian, 1 month ago

produces bubbles that contain dissolved air that is leaving the liquid​

Answers

Answered by vishnoishweta2
1

Answer:

rolling is the answer of this quesion

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Answered by stefangonzalez246
0

COMPLETE QUESTION:

"What are the causes of bubbles in boiling water?"

ANSWER:

When one starts boiling water,  you can basically see bubbles. Technically, these are bubbles formed from the dissolved gas coming out of the solution. Therefore, if the water is in a different atmosphere, the bubbles will be composed of those gases. Under normal conditions, the first bubbles are mainly nitrogen and oxygen, and some argon and carbon dioxide.

As the water continues to heat, the molecule gains enough energy to move from the liquid phase to the gas phase. These bubbles are water vapor. Looking at the water in the "rolling boil", the bubbles are entirely made of water vapor. Water vapor vesicles begin to form at the nucleation site. Nucleation sites are often small air sacs, so when water begins to boil, the vesicles become a mixture of air and water vapor. Bubbles and water vapor bubbles expand as they rise due to the low pressure.

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