Wednesday, October 4, 2017

thermodynamics - Why does hand sanitizer leave your skin feeling cool?


I noticed, and perhaps many others have too, that the application of hand sanitizer (mainly ethanol), leaves one's hands feeling rather chilly after application.



What is responsible for this phenomena? Is it the high heat of vaporization of hand sanitizer? However, explanation doesn't hold water; water has a standard heat of vaporization of 40.65 kJ/mol while ethanol has a heat of vaporization of 38.56 kJ/mol.


Could it be the low boiling point of ethanol? Hand sanitizer disappears (vaporizes) within seconds upon rubbing the hands together. Water, however, does not.


Additionally, how does one square a high heat of vaporization with a low boiling point? If it takes a lot of energy to vaporize something, then how can that something have a low boiling point?



Answer



As user137 noted, this is from evaporation of the alcohol. Evaporation of a liquid takes the enthalpy of vaporization away with it, making you cooler. Just like how sweating helps keep you cool in the summer, and how swamp coolers (evaporative coolers) keep houses cool in the southwest.


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