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Phase Diagrams Explained: Triple Point & Critical Point
2026/06/05

Phase Diagrams Explained: Triple Point & Critical Point

Learn how to read a phase diagram: the solid, liquid, and gas regions, the melting, boiling, and sublimation curves, plus the triple point and critical point, with water and CO2 examples.

A phase diagram is a map of the states of matter. Instead of showing one phase change at a time, it shows every phase of a substance at once — telling you whether it will be a solid, liquid, or gas at any combination of temperature and pressure.

This guide explains how to read a phase diagram: the regions, the curves that separate them, and the two special points — the triple point and the critical point — with examples for water and carbon dioxide.

Phase diagram with solid, liquid, and gas regions separated by curves, marked with a triple point and a critical point

Quick Answer: What Is a Phase Diagram?

A phase diagram is a graph with temperature on the x-axis and pressure on the y-axis that shows which phase — solid, liquid, or gas — a substance is in at each combination of the two. Lines on the graph mark the conditions where two phases are in equilibrium, and they meet at the triple point.

The Regions and Curves

The diagram is divided into three regions, one for each phase, separated by three curves:

  • Solid region (high pressure, low temperature).
  • Liquid region (moderate pressure and temperature).
  • Gas region (low pressure, high temperature).
  • Fusion curve — the solid/liquid boundary (melting and freezing).
  • Vaporization curve — the liquid/gas boundary (boiling and condensing).
  • Sublimation curve — the solid/gas boundary (subliming and depositing).

Anywhere on a curve, the two neighboring phases coexist in equilibrium. Crossing a curve is a phase change.

Labeled phase diagram showing the solid, liquid, and gas regions, the melting and boiling points along 1 atm, the triple point and the critical point

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The Triple Point

The triple point is the single temperature and pressure where all three curves meet and solid, liquid, and gas coexist in equilibrium at the same time. It is unique to each substance — for water it is 0.01 °C at 0.006 atm (611.66 Pa). Below the triple-point pressure a substance cannot exist as a liquid at all; heating the solid takes it straight to gas (sublimation), which is exactly what dry ice does.

The Critical Point

The critical point sits at the upper end of the vaporization curve. Beyond it — above the critical temperature and pressure — the liquid and gas phases become indistinguishable and the substance is a supercritical fluid, with properties of both. Above the critical temperature you cannot liquefy a gas no matter how hard you compress it.

Carbon dioxide phase diagram showing its triple point above 1 atm, which is why CO2 sublimes as dry ice

Water vs Carbon Dioxide

Comparing two substances shows why phase diagrams matter:

  • Water has an unusual negatively sloped fusion curve — the solid/liquid line leans left. This is because ice is less dense than liquid water, so increasing pressure can melt ice. Most substances slope the other way.
  • Carbon dioxide has its triple point above 1 atm (5.1 atm). That means at ordinary pressure CO₂ has no liquid state — solid CO₂ (dry ice) sublimes straight to gas, which is why it leaves no puddle.

Water phase diagram showing the characteristic negatively sloped solid-liquid boundary

How to Read a Phase Diagram

  1. Find your point using the temperature and pressure values.
  2. See which region it lands in — that is the phase.
  3. Move along a path (heating = right, compressing = up) and note each curve you cross — each crossing is a phase change.
  4. Check the special points: is your pressure below the triple point (sublimation only) or above the critical point (supercritical)?

Common Mistakes

  • Swapping the axes. Temperature is on the x-axis, pressure on the y-axis.
  • Assuming every fusion curve slopes right. Water's slopes left because ice floats.
  • Confusing the triple point and the critical point. Triple point = all three phases coexist; critical point = liquid and gas become one.
  • Forgetting sublimation. Below the triple-point pressure, solid goes directly to gas.

FAQ

What does a phase diagram show?

It shows which phase (solid, liquid, or gas) a substance is in at any given temperature and pressure, with curves marking where two phases are in equilibrium.

What is the triple point?

The triple point is the unique temperature and pressure at which the solid, liquid, and gas phases of a substance all coexist in equilibrium. For water it is 0.01 °C and 0.006 atm.

What is the critical point?

The critical point is the end of the liquid-gas curve, beyond which liquid and gas are indistinguishable and the substance becomes a supercritical fluid. Above the critical temperature a gas cannot be liquefied by pressure alone.

Why does water have an unusual phase diagram?

Because ice is less dense than liquid water, water's solid-liquid (fusion) curve slopes to the left (negative slope). Increasing pressure can melt ice — the opposite of most substances.

Why does dry ice sublime instead of melting?

Because carbon dioxide's triple point is above 1 atm (about 5.1 atm). At ordinary atmospheric pressure CO₂ has no liquid phase, so solid CO₂ turns directly into gas.

Further Reading

  • Phase Diagrams — Chemistry LibreTexts
  • Phase Diagrams — Purdue University
  • Phase diagram — Encyclopaedia Britannica
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Quick Answer: What Is a Phase Diagram?The Regions and CurvesThe Triple PointThe Critical PointWater vs Carbon DioxideHow to Read a Phase DiagramCommon MistakesFAQWhat does a phase diagram show?What is the triple point?What is the critical point?Why does water have an unusual phase diagram?Why does dry ice sublime instead of melting?Further Reading

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