WASHING-SOCKS

Colourful socks hanging on a washing line

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Question

This seems to be a simple phenomenon but I have a question on it. How do clothes dry or even how does water in any place dry out without heating it up? It’s obviously that water boils and evaporates but how does water just vanish off your clothes when they’re wet?

Answer

Chris - It's a good question. Water has energy. So, in other words, at any given temperature, the water molecules are vibrating or moving around, proportional to the temperature of the water and when we give energy to water sufficient to raise the temperature to 100 degrees, what that means is that the molecules of water are vibrating or moving around sufficiently fast, that they can readily break the attraction that's holding them onto other water molecules - because water is sticky - and this enables them to escape and get out into the atmosphere as vapour.

Kat - But you don't dry your clothes at 100 degrees, so what's going on here?

Chris - Absolutely, not. What you are doing, though if you, say, put them in a tumble dryer, or hang them on the line, is that you are putting some heat into the clothes; or, just because they're at ambient temperature they're not absolute zero. The atoms and molecules therefore have some energy. Now, because the energy is not shared equally amongst all the atoms or molecules - in other words, if I come up to you and I shake your hand, I can give you some energy - when the molecules are bashing into each other, sometimes some of them will end up transiently with a load of energy from lots of other molecules bashing into them and others will have much less. This means that occasionally, you've got the odd molecule there that has sufficient levels of energy that it can break the bonds holding onto other molecules and it can escape. The reason its slower to dry at less than 100 degrees or however hot you want to make is because obviously, it takes longer for those interactions to occur so that the odd molecule gets enough energy to escape and that's why the sea for instance, can evaporate water when sunlight falls on it and warms up the ocean without having to boil itself. It's just much slower. If you put a pot on the stove, you give lots more energy to lots more atoms and molecules all at once and as a result, more of them have more energy more of the time and therefore, they're able to evaporate, and that's the reason.

Ben - Do you reach any equilibrium between water in the clothes and humidity in the air? I assume that when there's more wind blowing then you've got lower humidity in the air because it's more of its moving parts.

Chris - Yes. I mean around the item that you're drying, the air that's in contact with the clothing will become slightly more saturated with water. So, in order to maintain the gradient, in other words, water wants to move from an area where there is lots of water to an area where there is much less water. If you have wind blowing, this is moving away any molecules of water that get off of the clothing and into the surrounding air very quickly and therefore, you maintain that gradient. So, the molecules want to move more readily away from the clothing.

Kat - So, this explains why tumble dryers are great because they're hot and they're sort of blowing air around and tumbling things about?

Chris - Absolutely!

Comments

How will these clothes become dry

The clothes get dries up because the heat of the sunlight comes in contraction of wet clothes and the water gets evaporated , which makes the clothes dry

Does the water in wet clothes dry up only due to sunlight, or due to other reasons?

The answer is supplied above. Did you read it?

Based on my understanding of work done : Work is done when a force applied to an object causes a change in position.
Now a cloth that was wet and now dry. Can we say work is done?

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