Latent heat

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Latent heat is the heat required for an object to change phase (melt, boil, freeze, etc.). This energy is closely related to enthalpy.[1] In figure 1, very cold ice has heat added to it. The temperature goes up, so that's sensible heat, but once it starts melting, that heat is latent heat (and is represented by the flat parts of the line, during melting or evaporation).

Figure 1. Adding heat to water can either raise the temperature or change the phase.[2] The heat that changes the temperature is sensible heat, the heat that changes the phase is latent heat.

Fusion

The latent heat of fusion is the heat required for an object to go from the solid state to the liquid state, or vice versa.[1] Since its value is generally much higher than specific heat, it allows you to keep a beverage cold for much longer by adding ice than simply having a cold liquid to begin with. It's also why frozen meat takes a long time to thaw, but once its thawed, it heats up quickly.

Ice and water have enormous latent heats associated with them which is why snow takes so long to melt and boiling water is used for cooking. This is also important in keeping our planet comfortable to live on, and provides a fair amount of resistance to climate change.

Vaporization

The latent heat of vaporization is the thermal energy required for a liquid to vaporize to a gas or the amount that is released when a gas condenses to a liquid.[1] Water has a high latent heat of vaporization, which is why steam burns are so dangerous. When steam burns a person's arm for example, this energy transfer causes the steam to condense—which uses much more energy than simply changing the temperature. Hot water would also burn, however, if a person were to get a hot water burn—that would only change the temperature of the person's hand and the water, and will not cause a phase change. Therefore, steam water burns are much worse (because a phase change is actually happening).


To learn more about enthalpy and latent heat please see hyperphysics.

For Further Reading

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Randall Knight, Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 3rd Ed. New York: Pearson, 2013, Ch. 17, p. 482.
  2. Wikimedia Commons [Online], Available: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Water_Phase_Change_Diagram.png#/media/File:Water_Phase_Change_Diagram.png