What happen to the kinetic and potential energy during the boiling and melting?

AI Thread Summary
Kinetic energy in a substance arises from the motion of its atoms or molecules, while potential energy is linked to the chemical connections between them. During boiling or melting, the addition of heat does not increase temperature but is used to break these molecular connections, raising potential energy. As a substance changes state, its potential energy increases while its kinetic energy remains constant until the phase change is complete. This process involves latent heat, which is the energy required for the transformation without a temperature change. Understanding these energy dynamics is crucial in thermodynamics.
Chaos&Anarchy
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
I know this question is probably chicken feet to most of the people here, and I hope I am posting on the right thread. But I am just curious about 2 questions;

1 - Where does the kinetic and potential energy comes from in a substance?
2 - How are the kinetic and potential energy affected by boiling or melting?

Any reply would be a real help. Thanks =D
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Substances are composed of atoms or molecules. They are in constant motion (vibrating or translating depending on the state of the substance).
Temperature is the average kinetic energy of a molecule of that substance.
There are connections between the molecules (chemical connections) - potential energy of the substance.
The whole energy of all the molecules (kinetic and potential) is the internal energy of the substance.
If you place another substance(2) in contact with the substance(1) the molecules of the two substances will come in contact and will tend to even their kinetic energies (temperatures).
Heat is the energy that has been transfered.
When a substance goes from one state to another the addition of heat does not increase the temperature of the substance but is used to brake the connections between molecules (to bring the molecules to higher potential level).

From this I hope you can answer those questions.
 
So basically, while the change of state is occurring only the amount of potential is changed while kinetic energy remains the same? Thanks a lot. That was really helpful.
 
Yes, that energy is called latent heat (heat of transformation).
I'm glad I was able to help.
 
The rope is tied into the person (the load of 200 pounds) and the rope goes up from the person to a fixed pulley and back down to his hands. He hauls the rope to suspend himself in the air. What is the mechanical advantage of the system? The person will indeed only have to lift half of his body weight (roughly 100 pounds) because he now lessened the load by that same amount. This APPEARS to be a 2:1 because he can hold himself with half the force, but my question is: is that mechanical...
Hello everyone, Consider the problem in which a car is told to travel at 30 km/h for L kilometers and then at 60 km/h for another L kilometers. Next, you are asked to determine the average speed. My question is: although we know that the average speed in this case is the harmonic mean of the two speeds, is it also possible to state that the average speed over this 2L-kilometer stretch can be obtained as a weighted average of the two speeds? Best regards, DaTario
Some physics textbook writer told me that Newton's first law applies only on bodies that feel no interactions at all. He said that if a body is on rest or moves in constant velocity, there is no external force acting on it. But I have heard another form of the law that says the net force acting on a body must be zero. This means there is interactions involved after all. So which one is correct?
Back
Top