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-   -   Microwaving Water (https://www.quiltingboard.com/general-chit-chat-non-quilting-talk-f7/microwaving-water-t190501.html)

grocifer 05-31-2012 04:52 PM

Microwaving Water
 
A 26-year old man decided to have a cup of coffee. He took a cup of water and put it in the microwave to heat it up (something that he had done numerous times before). I am not sure how long he set the timer for, but he wanted to bring the water to a boil. When the timer shut the oven off, he removed the cup from the oven. As he looked into the cup, he noted that the water was not boiling, but suddenly the water in the cup 'blew up' into his face. The cup remained intact until he threw it out of his hand, but all the water had flown out into his face due to the build-up of energy. His whole face is blistered and he has 1st and 2nd degree burns to his face which may leave scarring.

He also may have lost partial sight in his left eye. While at the hospital, the doctor who was attending to him stated that this is a fairly common occurrence and water (alone) should never be heated in a microwave oven. If water is heated in this manner, something should be placed in the cup to diffuse the energy such as a wooden stir stick, tea bag, etc, (nothing metal).

General Electric's Response:

Thanks for contacting us; I will be happy to assist you. The e-mail that you received is correct. Microwaved water and other liquids do not always bubble when they reach boiling point. They can actually get superheated and not bubble at all. The superheated liquid will bubble up out of the cup when it is moved or when something like a spoon or tea bag is put into it.

To prevent this from happening and causing injury, do not heat any liquid for more than two minutes per cup. After heating, let the cup stand in the microwave for thirty seconds before moving it or adding anything into it.

Here is what a local high school science teacher had to say on the matter: 'Thanks for the microwave warning. I have seen this happen before. It is caused by a phenomenon known as super heating. It can occur any time water is heated and will particularly occur if the vessel that the water is heated in is new, or when heating a small amount of water (less than half a cup).

What happens is that the water heats faster than the vapor bubbles can form. If the cup is very new, then it is unlikely to have small surface scratches inside it that provide a place for the bubbles to form. As the bubbles cannot form and release some of the heat that has built up, the liquid does not boil, and the liquid continues to heat up well past its boiling point.

What then usually happens is that the liquid is bumped or jarred, which is just enough of a shock to cause the bubbles to rapidly form and expel the hot liquid. The rapid formation of bubbles is also why a carbonated beveragespews when opened after having been shaken.

If you pass this on, you could very well save someone from a lot of pain and suffering.

Jan in VA 06-01-2012 09:25 AM

Wow! I've noticed this phenomenon myself, but without the disastrous results. Pretty scary.

Jan in VA

nativetexan 06-01-2012 11:28 AM

yikes. my hubby puts a cup of yesterdays coffee in the microwave almost every morning.

Scissor Queen 06-01-2012 01:21 PM

I've actually done this myself. To do it you generally need a brand new cup. Even tiny scratches on the glass will let the bubbles form. To keep new cups from doing this wash them the first time and use a Scotch Brite scratcher in the bottom.

bearisgray 06-01-2012 01:25 PM

First time I've heard of where scratching a surface might be a good thing.
Thanks for the advisory.

Favorite Fabrics 06-01-2012 06:19 PM

Useful info.

I guess my microwave is VERY old. And weak. It takes 2.5 minutes to get a cup of tea hot.

Peckish 06-01-2012 07:42 PM

I'd heard of this before. The version I heard had something to do with using glass, that heating in glass was the main culprit. I prefer using glass over plastics, so I just try to be careful.

quiltingcandy 06-01-2012 07:47 PM

One of our local new stations did a story on this years ago. The trigger was using the metal spoon after the water was heater or putting the hot water into a metal bowl. Then it reacted much like a bomb going off. The water went everywhere and the spoon flew out of the water at great speed too.

Jammin' Jane 06-04-2012 11:20 AM

WOW! That's scary!!!

mimiknoxtaylor 06-04-2012 04:43 PM

This happened to me last year. I was heating water for tea in the microwave. When it dinged I opened it right away, the water exploded. Luckily I had the door in front of my face (it's at eye level over oven) and only my hand got a nasty burn. Needless to say I don't swing that door open right away


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