Hi I'm trying to combine some concepts about boiling with latent heat of vaporization as well as partial volume of gases.
When learning physical chemistry, I learned that when my liquid has an equal partial partial pressure as the external pressure (Ppartial pressure=Pexternal), the gas would be able to push away the atmosphere allowing the liquid to rapidly turn into a gas and escape. Would the reasoning for this be because the liquid is a real gas so in reality unlike an ideal gas, they do exert forces on each other (they do collide with other gas particles) rather than just on the walls of the container?
Then for latent heat of vaporization, I learned that once it reaches its boiling point, energy is required to overcome the intermolecular forces. So the temperature doesn't increase as heat is absorbed. But by just using this explanation there is no way to determine which temperature the liquid would boil at.
So how do I combine them together? Because by the partial pressure explanation it just means that boiling would occur when VP=Pexternal there's no reason about why the temperature remains constant during boiling and similar for the latent the explanation, there's no reason for why the boiling would occur at the specific temperature.
So I'm having some trouble linking them together actually. Thanks