Science, asked by manadi6654, 10 months ago

Rate of evaporation does not depend on *
Temperature of the surrounding
humidity
wing speed
quantity of the liquid​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

hlo mate this is totally wrong...

Explanation:

The rate of evaporation depends on

  • TEMPERATURE

The rate of evaporation increase on increasing the temperature

  • SURFACE AREA OF THE LIQUID

The rate of evaporation of a liquid can be increased by increasing the surface area of the liquid

  • HUMIDITY OF AIR

The amount of water vapour present in the air is called humidity.When the humidity of the air is low , then the rate of evaporation is high and water evaporate more readly

  • WIND SPEED

The rate of evaporation of liquid increase with increasing wind speed

hope its help you

Answered by Manulal857
4

Answer:

Hey Buddy here's ur answer

Ur question is wrong bro cause evaporation depends on:

  • Velocity of wind or wing speed :- It is a common observation that clothes dry faster on a windy day. With the increase in wind speed; the particles of water vapour move away with the wind, decreasing the water vapour in surrounding.

  • Temperature of surrounding :- With the increase in temperature of surrounding, more number of particles get enough Kinetic Energy to go into the vapour state.

  • Surface area of liquid exposed or quantity of the liquid:- Evaporation is a surface phenomenon. If the surface area is increased, the rate of evaporation increases. For example, while putting clothes for drying up we spread them out.

  • Humidity of surrounding :- Humidity is the amount of water vapour present in the atmosphere. The air around us cannot hold more than a definite amount of water vapour at a given temperature. If the amount of water in air is already high, the rate of evaporation decreases.

##The rate of evaporation depends on the liquid's exposed surface area (faster when increased), the humidity of surroundings (slower when increased), the presence of wind (faster when increased) and the temperature (faster when increased).

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