Melting Point, Freezing Point,
Boiling Point
Melting Point and Freezing
Point
Pure, crystalline solids have a characteristic melting point, the
temperature at which the solid melts to become a liquid. The transition between the solid
and the liquid is so sharp for small samples of a pure substance that melting points can
be measured to ±0.1oC. The melting point of solid oxygen, for example, is
-218.4oC.
Liquids have a characteristic temperature at which they turn into solids, known as
their freezing point. In theory, the melting point of a solid should be
the same as the freezing point of the liquid. In practice, small differences between these
quantities can be observed.
It is difficult, if not impossible, to heat a solid above its melting point because the
heat that enters the solid at its melting point is used to convert the solid into a
liquid. It is possible, however, to cool some liquids to temperatures below their freezing
points without forming a solid. When this is done, the liquid is said to be supercooled.
An example of a supercooled liquid can be made by heating solid sodium acetate
trihydrate (NaCH3CO2 ·3 H2O). When this solid melts, the
sodium acetate dissolves in the water that was trapped in the crystal to form a solution.
When the solution cools to room temperature, it should solidify. But it often doesn't. If
a small crystal of sodium acetate trihydrate is added to the liquid, however, the contents
of the flask solidify within seconds.
A liquid can become supercooled because the particles in a solid are packed in a
regular structure that is characteristic of that particular substance. Some of these
solids form very easily; others do not. Some need a particle of dust, or a seed crystal,
to act as a site on which the crystal can grow. In order to form crystals of sodium
acetate trihydrate, Na+ ions, CH3CO2- ions,
and water molecules must come together in the proper orientation. It is difficult for
these particles to organize themselves, but a seed crystal can provide the framework on
which the proper arrangement of ions and water molecules can grow.
Because it is difficult to heat solids to temperatures above their melting points, and
because pure solids tend to melt over a very small temperature range, melting points are
often used to help identify compounds. We can distinguish between the three sugars known
as glucose (MP = 150oC), fructose (MP =
103-105oC), and sucrose (MP = 185-186oC), for
example, by determining the melting point of a small sample.
Measurements of the melting point of a solid can also provide information about the
purity of the substance. Pure, crystalline solids melt over a very narrow range of
temperatures, whereas mixtures melt over a broad temperature range. Mixtures also tend to
melt at temperatures below the melting points of the pure solids.

Boiling Point
When a liquid is heated, it eventually reaches a temperature at which the vapor
pressure is large enough that bubbles form inside the body of the liquid. This temperature
is called the boiling point. Once the liquid starts to boil, the
temperature remains constant until all of the liquid has been converted to a gas.
The normal boiling point of water is 100oC. But if you try to cook an egg in
boiling water while camping in the Rocky Mountains at an elevation of 10,000 feet, you
will find that it takes longer for the egg to cook because water boils at only 90oC
at this elevation.
In theory, you shouldn't be able to heat a liquid to temperatures above its normal
boiling point. Before microwave ovens became popular, however, pressure cookers were used
to decrease the amount of time it took to cook food. In a typical pressure cooker, water
can remain a liquid at temperatures as high as 120oC, and food cooks in as
little as one-third the normal time.
To explain why water boils at 90oC in the mountains and 120oC in
a pressure cooker, even though the normal boiling point of water is 100oC, we
have to understand why a liquid boils. By definition, a liquid boils when the vapor
pressure of the gas escaping from the liquid is equal to the pressure exerted on the
liquid by its surroundings, as shown in the figure below.
 |
Liquids boil when their vapor pressure is equal to the pressure exerted on the liquid
by its surroundings. |
The normal boiling point of water is 100oC because this is
the temperature at which the vapor pressure of water is 760 mmHg, or 1 atm. Under normal
conditions, when the pressure of the atmosphere is approximately 760 mmHg, water boils at
100oC. At 10,000 feet above sea level, the pressure of the atmosphere is only
526 mmHg. At these elevations, water boils when its vapor pressure is 526 mmHg, which
occurs at a temperature of 90oC.
Pressure cookers are equipped with a valve that lets gas escape when the pressure
inside the pot exceeds some fixed value. This valve is often set at 15 psi, which means
that the water vapor inside the pot must reach a pressure of 2 atm before it can escape.
Because water doesn't reach a vapor pressure of 2 atm until the temperature is 120oC,
it boils in this container at 120oC.
Liquids often boil in an uneven fashion, or bump. They tend to bump when there
aren't any scratches on the walls of the container where bubbles can form. Bumping is
easily prevented by adding a few boiling chips to the liquid, which provide a rough
surface upon which bubbles can form. When boiling chips are used, essentially all of the
bubbles that rise through the solution form on the surface of these chips.

