Evaporation
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msulsona
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Evaporation
What do you think will evaporate first water, milk, soda or orange juice?
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ScienceExpert123
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Re: Evaporation
Well, if you think about it, all the liquids you mentioned are water based.
Milk- water, proteins, lipids, carbs, vitamins, and minerals
soda- water, carbon dioxide, sugars, flavorings
orange juice- water, carbs, vitamins, minerals, and natural pigments
when you add most solid substances (ex. carbs, proteins, minerals, ect.) to water it becomes more dense. Therefore, more energy is required to evaporate water + solids. This means that plain water (not salted) will evaporate faster than the other substances. Although, since soda has a lot of CO2, the volume of the soda might appear to evaporate much faster, but it's not losing that much mass. Acurately measuring evaporation requires measuring mass, not volume.
let me know if you have any more questions.
-scienceexpert123
Milk- water, proteins, lipids, carbs, vitamins, and minerals
soda- water, carbon dioxide, sugars, flavorings
orange juice- water, carbs, vitamins, minerals, and natural pigments
when you add most solid substances (ex. carbs, proteins, minerals, ect.) to water it becomes more dense. Therefore, more energy is required to evaporate water + solids. This means that plain water (not salted) will evaporate faster than the other substances. Although, since soda has a lot of CO2, the volume of the soda might appear to evaporate much faster, but it's not losing that much mass. Acurately measuring evaporation requires measuring mass, not volume.
let me know if you have any more questions.
-scienceexpert123
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msulsona
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Re: Evaporation
So If I put a small amount of these liquids under 60 watt bulbs will the results be the same as you mentioned?
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ScienceExpert123
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Re: Evaporation
yeah, if each liquid is exposed to the same environment then the plain water will probably evaporate the quickest by mass, but the soda will probably evaporate (the fizz (CO2) will go into the air) by volume quicker. Make sure you mass everything while watching the evaporation, instead of looking at the volume.
let me know if you need any more help
good luck,
scienceexpert123
let me know if you need any more help
good luck,
scienceexpert123
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vanessa + b
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Re: Evaporation
will water evaporate quicker than tea, sprite, and cranberry juice?
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SciB
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Re: Evaporation
Try it and find out!
Sybee
Sybee

