Latent heat is the energy absorbed or released by a substance during phase change without changing its temperature.
Types of Latent Heat:
Latent Heat of Fusion – The heat required to melt a solid into a liquid (or released when freezing).
Latent Heat of Vaporization – The heat required to boil a liquid into a gas (or released when condensing).
Why doesn't the temperature change:
When a substance undergoes a phase change, all the energy it absorbs (or releases) goes into breaking or forming molecular bonds, not into raising the temperature. That’s why ice at 0°C and water at 0°C have the same temperature but different energy levels.
Real-life applications:
Sweating & Cooling:
Your sweat absorbs heat from your body and evaporates, taking away latent heat and cooling you down.
Boiling Water & Steam Burns:
Steam at 100°C has more energy than boiling water at 100°C because it contains the latent heat of vaporization. That’s why steam burns are more severe than boiling water burns.
Ice Packs in Medicine:
When ice melts, it absorbs heat from the body, reducing swelling.
Refrigerators & Air Conditioners:
These work by compressing and expanding refrigerants, using latent heat to absorb heat from inside and release it outside.
Weather & Hurricanes:
When water evaporates from oceans, it stores latent heat in water vapor. When this vapor condenses into clouds, it releases heat, fueling hurricanes.
keywords
Phase change
Heat transfer
Fusion (melting)
Vaporization (boiling/evaporation)
Condensation
Sublimation
Freezing
Deposition
Energy absorption
Energy release
Specific latent heat
Thermodynamics
Cooling effect
Heat of fusion
Heat of vaporization
Why does steam cause more severe burns than boiling water at the same temperature?
Why does a cup of tea stay hot longer when covered, in terms of latent heat?
How does latent heat impact weather events like cyclones or thunderstorms?
Why do farmers use water to protect crops from frost in freezing temperatures?
What happens to the energy of a substance during a phase change, and why doesn't the temperature change?