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Melting and Cooling

Mixtures and Melting: Melting and Cooling

Melting and Cooling

Melting and Cooling

NCERT anchor

Looking Around 2 — activities like watching ice cream melt, or butter melting on hot roti, connect to Healthy Food and daily life.

What you'll learn

  • Melting happens when a solid gets warm and turns into a liquid.
  • Cooling can turn some liquids back into solids (like water freezing into ice).
  • Heat is needed to melt; cold is needed to freeze.

Key concepts

Verbal: Melting = solid → liquid (by heating). Freezing = liquid → solid (by cooling).

Symbolic: Ice (solid) --heat--> Water (liquid). Water (liquid) --cold--> Ice (solid).

Level 1 — Things that melt with heat

Ice, butter, chocolate, and candle wax melt when warmed.

Level 1 — Things that freeze with cold

Water freezes into ice in a freezer.

Level 1 — Examples around us

Solid melts to liquidWhere we see it
Ice → waterIce cube left outside
Butter → oily liquidButter on a hot pan
Chocolate → soft liquidChocolate in warm hands

Level 2 — Can it go back?

Melted butter can be cooled to become solid again (in the fridge). Melted ice (water) can freeze again.

Level 2 — India

Ghee turns from solid to liquid on a warm day; it becomes solid again in cold winter.

Worked example

A chocolate bar is left in the sun. What happens, and why?

Step 1 — The sun's heat warms the chocolate.
Step 2 — Chocolate changes from solid to soft/liquid.
Step 3 — This is called **melting**.
Answer: The chocolate melts because of heat.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhyFix
Melting is the same as dissolvingBoth look like "disappearing"Melting = heat changes state; dissolving = mixing with liquid
Ice always stays solidNot considering heatIce melts with heat
Melted things can never be solid againIgnoring coolingMany melted things can be frozen/cooled back

Quick check

  • What happens to an ice cube left on a table?
  • Name one solid that melts when heated.
  • What do we call it when a liquid turns back into a solid?

Stretch: Does chocolate melt faster in the sun or in a fridge? Why?

Revision tip: Watch an ice cube melt and describe the change in your own words.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Melting and Cooling.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • NCERT anchor
  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example

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