Chemistry, asked by ronaldoinam9554, 1 year ago

why ice cubes stick to gether when we put to each other

Answers

Answered by Rohanrocks
0
When I put ice cubes in a glass of water, I find that sometimes they will stick together and form a sort of "bridge" between them as they melt. There is usually a visible line where one ends and the other begins, and they break apart if pushed (but for the most part they stick together if they aren't interfered with). I'm wondering how they form this bridge in the first place if they're melting, and why it stays together.
Answered by Shreya1001
1
we know that ice melts below its freezing point at high pressure. When ice cubes are put together and given pressure then the ice melts at the point where the two ice cubes touch each other. Now when the excess pressure is removed the ice which was melted becomes ice again. This is the reason why ice cubes stick together when we put into each other.
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