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Melting

Changes of State: Melting

Melting

Melting: Solid to Liquid

What you'll learn

  • Define melting and identify the melting point.
  • Give examples of solids that melt on heating.
  • Explain that melting is a reversible change.
  • Connect melting to everyday Indian examples.

Key concepts

Level 1 - Meaning of melting

Melting is the change of a solid into a liquid when it is heated. Ice melting into water and butter melting in a warm pan are both common examples of melting.

Level 2 - Melting point

Every solid has its own melting point, the temperature at which it starts turning into a liquid. Ice melts at 0 degrees Celsius, while metals like iron need extremely high heat before they melt.

Level 3 - Melting is reversible

When a melted liquid is cooled again, it can turn back into a solid. Melted candle wax hardens back into solid wax once it cools, showing that melting can be reversed by freezing.

Level 4 - Indian context

On a hot summer afternoon, ice kept outside a freezer melts quickly into water. Kulfi and ice cream sold on the streets can start melting fast in the summer heat if not kept in a cooler.

NCERT anchor: Looking Around 4, general observation of heating and changes in materials (melting of ice, butter, wax)

Worked example

Melting an ice cube

Step 1 - Place an ice cube in a bowl at room temperature.
Step 2 - Watch it for several minutes.
Step 3 - Observe the solid ice slowly turning into liquid water.
Step 4 - Touch the bowl; it now holds only water, no ice.
Answer: The ice cube has melted, changing from a solid into a liquid.

Melting butter in a hot pan

Step 1 - Place a small piece of solid butter in a hot pan.
Step 2 - Heat the pan gently on a stove.
Step 3 - Observe the butter turning shiny and runny.
Step 4 - The butter can now be poured like a liquid.
Answer: Heat melted the solid butter into a liquid.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Melting and dissolving are the sameBoth make a solid seem to change formMelting needs heat and no solvent; dissolving needs a liquid solvent like water and no heat is required
All solids melt at the same temperatureIce melts easily, so all solids seem the sameDifferent solids have different melting points; metals need much higher heat than ice
Melting is a change that cannot be undoneMelted material looks completely differentMelting is reversible: cooling a melted liquid can freeze it back into a solid
A solid must be very hot to start meltingIce melts even in a cool roomA solid melts once it reaches its own melting point, which can be low, like 0 degrees Celsius for ice

Quick check

  • What is melting?
  • What is the melting point of ice?
  • Give one example of a solid melting at home.
  • Is melting reversible? Explain with an example.
  • Stretch: Explain why a metal spoon does not melt in hot tea but an ice cube does.

Revision tip: Melting turns a solid into a liquid when it is heated to its melting point.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Melting.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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