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2 votes
Why doesn't water change into ice at 10 degree Celsius?

A
The fusion of water is an endothermic change but at this temperature, the temperature entropy product outweighs the
change in enthalpy.
B.
The fusion of water is an exothermic change but at this temperature, the temperature entropy product outweighs the change
in enthalpy.
C.
The fusion of water is an endothermic change but at this temperature, the temperature-entropy product is outweighed by the
change in enthalpy.
D.
The fusion of water is an exothermic change but at this temperature, the temperature-entropy product is outweighed by the
change in enthalpy.

User Mike Kwan
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2 Answers

3 votes
i think it’s d not 100% sure tho
User Dimus
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0 votes

Answer:

The fusion of water is an exothermic change but at this temperature, the temperature–entropy product outweighs the change in enthalpy.

Step-by-step explanation:

Plato

User Yozh
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5.3k points