Can matter undergo phase transitions?
1 Answer
Jul 18, 2017
...If it is matter, then I hope so. If it is matter, it should be describable by a phase diagram (at least, in principle).
Benzene is a fine example:
http://www.nyu.edu/classes/tuckerman/pchem/
- If we start at
"280 K" and"30 torr" , and increase the pressure at constant temperature past roughly"40 torr" ...
...We condense the gas into a liquid. (If we reverse the process we just did, we vaporize the liquid into a gas.)
- If we start at
"273 K" and"10 torr" , and increase the pressure at constant temperature, we move vertically upwards in the phase diagram.
We consequently transform the gas into a solid, i.e. deposition, past roughly
"30 torr" . (If we reverse the process, we perform sublimation.)
- And if we look closely, the solid-liquid coexistence curve has a negative slope (is not perfectly vertical).
So if we start at roughly
"280 K" and"40 torr" (to the left of the triple point) and increase the pressure at constant temperature, past roughly"50 torr" we would melt the solid into a liquid. (The reverse process would be freezing the liquid.)