Surrounding Air Cools: Latent Heat of Fusion and Vaporization
Surrounding Air Cools: Latent Heat of Fusion and Vaporization
Fall 2010
Q = m L
When the transition occurs the other way such as vapor to liquid, the latent heat defines how
much energy is released from the mass into the environment.
-540 cal/gm
-80 cal/gm
-620 cal/gm
Surrounding air warms
108
339
184
-114
-75
-57
58
24.5
58.7
25.7
13.9
334
-259
372.3
-182.
-210
-219
0
855
1369
574
21
455
871
510
200
213
2500 (at
0oC)
Boiling Point
C at 1013 mb
78.3
-33.34
-78
-268.93
-253
1750
-161.6 C
-196
-183
100
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ATMO551a
Fall 2010
The magnitude of the latent heat is a measure of how strongly bound the molecules are to one
another in the liquid and solid states. Note in the table above that water has the highest latent
heat of vaporization. The next highest is ammonia, NH3, which is similar in many ways to water,
H2O. Both are asymmetrical molecules with large permanent electric dipole moments that make
the molecules readily and tightly bind to one another.
Molar form of the latent heat reveals more about the binding energy.
Heat required to melt and boil some water
Take 5 grams of ice initially at -20oC. How much energy does it take to raise the water
molecules in the ice to a temperature of 100oC and fully vaporize the water molecules?
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
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