Super heating water in a microwave oven

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Superheating water in a microwave occurs primarily due to a lack of nucleation sites for gas bubbles to form, compounded by uneven heating. Clean cups provide fewer nucleation sites, which reduces the likelihood of superheated molecules reaching these sites. Additionally, repeatedly reheating water can degas the fluid, increasing the risk of superheating. This phenomenon can lead to dangerous situations when the water finally does boil. Caution is advised when heating water in a microwave to prevent accidents.
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Is this caused by a lack of nucleation for the gas pockets to be formed or the uneven heating of the water?

A clean cup isn't proviingvery many nucleation sites and is it this combined with the even heating meanings the chance of the super heated molecules reaching these sites is reduced is the cause
 
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rc1102 said:
Is this caused by a lack of nucleation for the gas pockets to be formed or the uneven heating of the water?

A clean cup isn't proviingvery many nucleation sites and is it this combined with the even heating meanings the chance of the super heated molecules reaching these sites is reduced is the cause

Yes, a lack of bubble nucleation sites.

The reason fluids get superheated isn't just a lack of sites for nucleation, it also happens when you leave something in the microwave and reheat it, forget it, reheat it, rinse and repeat. This effectively degasses the fluid to some varying degrees, or at least, that's how I understand it.

Be careful.:bugeye:
 
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