Physics Asked on February 11, 2021
In my physics-class, I was told that,
"The melting point of the same substance changes under different pressure. But it can change in two different manner"
There are 2 different ways it can change:
$(1)$ For higher pressure , the melting point will be lower (Like water)
$(2)$ For higher pressure , the melting point will be higher.
Also ,
$(1)$ This case happens for those substances which decrease in Volume when changing from a solid to a liquid.
$(2)$ This case happens for those substances which increase in Volume when changing from a solid to a liquid.
I have two questions
$(a)$ Can someone give me some more examples of of substances for case $(1)$ and case $(2)$ . [I couldn’t find any except ‘water’ that was told in my physics class]
$(b)$ Why does melting point vs pressure depend on Volume change Like this ?
(b) Among the theoretical criteria for melting, the Lindemann and Born criteria are those most frequently used as a basis to analyse the melting conditions:
(a) Every material has its own phase diagram where you can see how the pressure affects phase transitions. Unfortunately I don't know many such examples, however there is one interesting material GdN (Gadolinium nitride) (see image below).
I've also read that carbon has similar effects under significant pressure (see image below).
There are even more bizzare cases than that, for example helium (see image below).
Answered by Krumuvecis on February 11, 2021
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