rude man said:
<< Another thing to consider is that a line is a phase diagram really tells us nothing more than that the bulk system is in transition. It is "all" (but not quite) one phase on one side of the line and "all" (but not quite) the other phase on the other side. The question of what is happening in the bulk system becomes more difficult to answer when it is very close to that line. >>Huh? A phase diagram represents an equilibrium condition of state, not a transition picture. Maybe we're not talking about the same diagram. Mine graphs p on the ordinate and V on the abscissa, and shows the isothermals (flat between all-liquid and all-vapor states of course, etc.).
I am aware of what diagram you are speaking of. According to the phase diagram for water, it should be a "liquid" at one atmosphere and room temperature. Yet, I can leave towels out to dry and the film of water at the bottom of a glass is gone in a matter of hours. I have been saying that a phase diagram tells you little about what is happening at the surface of a substance; it only tells you what the great majority of the substance is like. Away from a phase boundary, little of the material is in other than the phase indicated; very close to a boundary, the material takes on characteristics of both phases. (At the triple point of water, it cannot be said to be solid, liquid,
or vapor.)
And the bit about being "very close to that line" ? Sublimation is supposed to stop at < 5 mm Hg whereas my refrigerator is around 760 mm Hg. Pretty big slopover, wouldn't you say?
I have not had enough thermodynamics, but this is relevant here:
http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/~cchieh/cact/c123/clausius.html
[The fact that mid-19th Century physicists investigated this indicates that they were also bothered by then about this question of evaporation far from a phase boundary...]
This is what is used to calculate vapor pressure. The sublimation (evaporation) curve doesn't say that it "stops" at 5 mm Hg; the vapor pressure of ice reaches (a bit less than) that value at 0º C. This indicates a rate at which surface molecules are escaping, and is greatest then; at lower temperatures, the vapor pressure is lower, so the rate of sublimation is lower. [Sublimation "stops" only in the sense that the bulk of the ice is now changing phase.]
Humidity in the surrounding air matters because it will affect the net rate of sublimation. The ice has a vapor pressure and has water molecules escaping, but the surrounding air has water molecules that can be captured by the ice. So there is presumably a critical level of humidity at various temperatures at one atmosphere at which "net sublimation" stops. A "frost-free" refrigerator avoids this by drawing water vapor out of the chamber to prevent the partial pressure of water vapor from matching the vapor pressure of the frost.