No, just the hydrogen bonds between neighboring water molecules.
2007-07-07 15:45:30
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answer #1
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answered by Frank N 7
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No. The chemical bonds are far too strong to be broken by the thermal agitation present at the boiling point. At temperatures of several thousand degrees, the agitation is sufficient to break the bonds, and there will be a mixture of water vapor, hydrogen, and oxygen, with the relative concentrations depending on the temperature.
2007-07-07 15:46:26
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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no they stay together but change state. Somewhat similar as when it goes from liquid to solid (water to ice) the molecules stay together the whole time. This is also why you can boil water in a sealed container and then cool it back into a liquid again.
2007-07-07 16:00:03
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answer #3
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answered by rheltion 2
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No. the warmth means is extra kinetic means to the water. That steam continues to be water - in a various actual state. that's a actual exchange. we can get hydrogen from water - yet that's a chemical exchange... a "gasoline cellular" - and previous the scope of this direction
2016-10-20 05:55:59
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answer #4
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answered by contino 4
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No. That would imply a chemical change, while evaporation from water to steam is physical :)
2007-07-07 15:42:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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ummmmm noooo...cuzz if that happens it's not water anymore...the water molecules stay the same...their form might change though.
2007-07-11 02:55:02
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Wouldn't that make a gas stove a little dangerous?
2007-07-07 15:46:08
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answer #7
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answered by Fly On The Wall 7
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no. you need more heat to separate the bond.
the water will just change into steam. that is physical change.
2007-07-07 15:44:51
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answer #8
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answered by Alfred Villegas 2
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no, because evaporation is just a physical change...
2007-07-07 15:52:25
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answer #9
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answered by simply 3
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no
2007-07-07 16:43:19
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answer #10
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answered by nightowl 2
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