Can Ice and Water Vapor Coexist in Air?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion explores whether ice and water vapor can coexist in air at certain temperatures and pressures, focusing on the phase transitions of water and the conditions under which sublimation occurs. Participants examine the relationship between air presence and phase changes, comparing it to the coexistence of liquid water and vapor.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that ice can sublimate directly into vapor without melting, depending on the conditions of temperature and pressure.
  • Others clarify that sublimation is a phase change from solid to gas, distinct from evaporation, which is from liquid to gas.
  • A participant questions whether a chart similar to the psychrometric chart exists for the ice-to-vapor transition in the presence of air.
  • There is a discussion about the boiling and evaporation processes, with some participants noting that boiling is a special case of evaporation.
  • One participant mentions the triple point of water, where solid, liquid, and gas coexist, suggesting that ice and vapor can coexist along the S-V boundary of the phase diagram.
  • There is uncertainty regarding the relationship between melting, boiling, and evaporation, with participants discussing the nature of these phase transitions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree that sublimation occurs and that ice can transition to vapor, but there is no consensus on the specific conditions required for this coexistence or the existence of a corresponding chart. The relationship between different phase transitions remains debated.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty about the definitions and relationships between phase transitions, particularly regarding melting, boiling, and evaporation. The discussion highlights the complexity of phase diagrams and the conditions under which different states of water can coexist.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those studying thermodynamics, phase transitions, or the properties of water in various states, as well as individuals curious about the behavior of substances in different environmental conditions.

Red_CCF
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Hi

I was wondering if, for water, is it possible for ice and water vapour to co-exist at some temperature and pressure due to the presence of air (not phase equilibrium among itself) like we see for liquid water and water vapour in psychrometrics, why or why not?

Thanks.
 
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Red_CCF said:
Hi

I was wondering if, for water, is it possible for ice and water vapour to co-exist at some temperature and pressure due to the presence of air (not phase equilibrium among itself) like we see for liquid water and water vapour in psychrometrics, why or why not?

Thanks.

Any solid coexists with a gas phase, because all materials have some non-zero vapor pressure. What do you mean by "due to the presence of air"?
 
Mapes said:
Any solid coexists with a gas phase, because all materials have some non-zero vapor pressure. What do you mean by "due to the presence of air"?

Hi

Sorry for not being clear, my question is kind of confusing. For water, liquid and vapour can coexist (at say 1 atm and 25 degrees celsius) when exposed to air which explains how a cup of water becomes empty over time at conditions below its phase change on the phase diagram. I was wondering if such phenomenon is also possible if we have ice instead of liquid water (is there a condition where if I put a piece of ice in a glass exposed to air it would turn into vapour directly without melting). I hope this is less confusing.

Thanks
 
Red_CCF said:
Hi

Sorry for not being clear, my question is kind of confusing. For water, liquid and vapour can coexist (at say 1 atm and 25 degrees celsius) when exposed to air which explains how a cup of water becomes empty over time at conditions below its phase change on the phase diagram. I was wondering if such phenomenon is also possible if we have ice instead of liquid water (is there a condition where if I put a piece of ice in a glass exposed to air it would turn into vapour directly without melting). I hope this is less confusing.

Thanks

It is possible and it is called http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublimation_%28phase_transition%29" .
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Mapes said:
It is possible and it is called http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublimation_%28phase_transition%29" .

Hi

Thanks for the response. Sublimation still occurs when the system contains a pure substance (e.g. water) and is based on the phase diagram. For a cup of liquid water that is left at room temperature and pressure, it becomes vapour because of the presence of air and the psychrometric chart is used to determine humidity/how much vapour etc. as the phase diagram is only valid for a closed system with pure substance. I was wondering if such chart/phenomenon exists if the water was ice to begin with and whether ice can directly vaporize if the system contains air and the ice not just H2O alone.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Red_CCF said:
Sublimation still occurs when the system contains a pure substance (e.g. water)

No; sublimation is a phase change from the solid to the gas state. Evaporation is a phase change from the liquid state (e.g., water) to the gas state.

Red_CCF said:
I was wondering if such chart/phenomenon exists if the water was ice to begin with and whether ice can directly vaporize if the system contains air and the ice not just H2O alone.

Yes, ice still sublimates even if it is surrounded by air. Some of the H2O molecules bounce off air molecules and condense back on the ice, but the net reaction is from ice to gas. Try leaving an ice tray in your freezer for a few months; the ice cubes will gradually disappear. (Even if the ice is mixed with another substance such as salt. Note that the salt's vapor pressure is far too low for it to evaporate noticeably within a time span of years. The salt would be left behind.)
 
Mapes said:
No; sublimation is a phase change from the solid to the gas state. Evaporation is a phase change from the liquid state (e.g., water) to the gas state.
Yes, ice still sublimates even if it is surrounded by air. Some of the H2 molecules bounce off air molecules and condense back on the ice, but the net reaction is from ice to gas. Try leaving an ice tray in your freezer for a few months; the ice cubes will gradually disappear.

Hi

Thanks for clearing that up!

Is there a chart similar to the psychrometrics chart that describes this ice to vapour transition in the presence of air under difference conditions?

Also, how come we have boiling and evaporation for liquid to vapour transition? Do we have two types of transitions for solid to liquid or solid to ice?

Thanks
 
Red_CCF said:
Is there a chart similar to the psychrometrics chart that describes this ice to vapour transition in the presence of air under difference conditions?

Perhaps you can make one!

Red_CCF said:
Also, how come we have boiling and evaporation for liquid to vapour transition?

Boiling is a special case of evaporation in which the vapor pressure has exceeded the atmospheric pressure.
 
Mapes said:
Perhaps you can make one!



Boiling is a special case of evaporation in which the vapor pressure has exceeded the atmospheric pressure.

Is melting more synonymous to boiling or more to evaporation? What about sublimation?
 
  • #10
Red_CCF said:
Is melting more synonymous to boiling or more to evaporation? What about sublimation?

What do you think? Melting is defined as a change of state from what to what?
 
  • #11
  • #12
Mapes said:
What do you think? Melting is defined as a change of state from what to what?

From solid to liquid? So I guess closer to evaporation?
 
  • #13
Red_CCF said:
From solid to liquid? So I guess closer to evaporation?

I'm not sure why a solid-to-liquid transition would be more like a liquid-to-gas transition and less like a solid-to-gas transition... They all seem pretty distinct.
 
  • #14
Mapes said:
I'm not sure why a solid-to-liquid transition would be more like a liquid-to-gas transition and less like a solid-to-gas transition... They all seem pretty distinct.

I can see how this question is kind of weird. I was thinking that, in boiling there is bubble/phase change in the bulk of the liquid, so I'm just wondering if in melting does it occur from the outside inwards or within the bulk of the solid.
 
  • #15
Red_CCF said:
I can see how this question is kind of weird. I was thinking that, in boiling there is bubble/phase change in the bulk of the liquid, so I'm just wondering if in melting does it occur from the outside inwards or within the bulk of the solid.

Boiling and melting will both generally occur preferentially closer to the heat source (assuming ample possible nucleation sites).
 
  • #16
Mapes said:
Boiling and melting will both generally occur preferentially closer to the heat source (assuming ample possible nucleation sites).

Hi

So am I correct to say that in boiling, the liquid closer to the heat source vaporizes first (i.e. from the outside inwards) and the bubble in the bulk of the liquid results from these vapors from the outside rising up?

Thanks very much
 
  • #17
Generally, yes.
 

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