Any substance which is liquid at that temperature. Liquids evaporate at any temperature. If you mean boiling, which happens at a fixed temperature at fixed pressure, then nitric acid fits.
Any liquid tend to be evaporated; temperature and pressure have an important role.
Yes, liquids other than water can also evaporate. Evaporation is the process by which a liquid turns into a gas at a temperature below its boiling point. This can happen with any liquid substance.
Evaporation occur at any temperature.
When the temperature of a fluid inside a closed container is increased, the pressure inside the container also increases. This is due to the fact that as the temperature of a fluid increases, the molecules gain more kinetic energy and move faster, causing more collisions with the walls of the container, which in turn increases the pressure.
Water is evaporated at any temperature; a high pressure and a low pressure favors evaporation.
Any substance which is liquid at that temperature. Liquids evaporate at any temperature. If you mean boiling, which happens at a fixed temperature at fixed pressure, then nitric acid fits.
Any liquid tend to be evaporated; temperature and pressure have an important role.
In theory, any liquid will evaporate to some extent at any normal Temperature. Evaporation rate for any fluid is, for all practical purposes, determined by only two factors ... the Vapor Pressure of the fluid at the ambient Temperature, and the Degree of Saturation of atmosphere into which it is evaporating.In short, the Higher the Temperature of the Gasoline, the faster it will evaporate from an open container.
Yes, liquids other than water can also evaporate. Evaporation is the process by which a liquid turns into a gas at a temperature below its boiling point. This can happen with any liquid substance.
Evaporation occur at any temeperature but a high temperature or a low pressure favors evaporation.
By agreement, the very definition of 'volatile liquid' identifies a liquid which evaporates at Standard Temp/Pressure. The rate at which it evaporates is called its vapor pressure. High VP means it will evaporate rapidly at STP. Theoretically, any material, element or compound, in liquid form can be made to evaporate by increasing the temperature and reducing the pressure. Gas-deposition makes use of this theory to build industrial diamonds from hot, highly-pressurized carbon vapor.
Water can evaporate at any temperature, but its rate of evaporation increases as the temperature rises. At the boiling point of water (212°F or 100°C at sea level), water evaporates rapidly, transitioning to steam.
Evaporation occur at any temperature.
Water can be evaporated at any temperature.
Water is evaporated at any temperature but a high temperature favors evaporation.
Water - or other liquids - will evaporate at practically any temperature. Boiling is defined as the temperature at which the partial vapor pressure is equal to the atmospheric pressure. In practical terms, it means that the boiling water (or other liquid) can't get any hotter assuming the pressure doesn't change. You'll also see lots of bubbles rising from the boiling liquid (but before it is boiling, there will also be a few bubbles).