Heat is used to vaporize the liquid. Pressure causes the chemical to vaporize.
Recent Examples on the WebOver 11 days in late summer 1985, a group of scientists and graduate students gathered at Rice University in Houston to use a powerful laser to vaporize carbon and chill the atoms to near absolute zero. Brian Murphy, BostonGlobe.com, 9 July 2022 Instead of firing a continuous beam, weapons would instead fire short but intense pulses rapid enough to vaporize the outer layer of any target. David Hambling, Popular Mechanics, 23 May 2022 Which is hardly to say the music will vaporize: A CD release of both albums will follow just a week later, versus the previous month-long window that Evans fans used to have to wait for a wide release of the sets. Chris Willman, Variety, 22 Apr. 2022 The ensuing fireball would vaporize every person and every structure within a half-mile.Washington Post, 17 Apr. 2022 Pearce used a laser to vaporize the zircon, then analyzed its chemical composition. Simon Akam, The New Yorker, 15 Feb. 2022 The blast wave typically lasts longer than a conventional explosive and has the ability to vaporize people.Fox News, 1 Mar. 2022 Given the city’s population density, that would instantly vaporize tens of thousands of Americans, with indirect damage killing many more. Andrew Follett, National Review, 27 Feb. 2022 Much like water vapor that gets cycled around on WASP-121b, these metal clouds may get shoved over to the dayside where the metals vaporize into gases. Ashley Strickland, CNN, 21 Feb. 2022 See More