Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle.

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Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes

Transcript of Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle.

Page 1: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle.

Changes in the state of matter

Phase Changes

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State of matter change triangle

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Change in a material’s states of matter

Is a Physical, not Chemical change

• No Chemical reaction occurs

• Done by adding or subtracting energy to the amount held by each atom

• Also called a phase change

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When state of matter changes

What does not change:

I. The composition of the matter

II. The mass (same mass of liquid water as steam)

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When state of matter changes

What does change:

I. The volume of the matter

II.The amount of energy held within the matter

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Phase change Categories

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Endothermic change

Occurs when object gains energy from other sources

Added energy result in less restrictive connections between atoms, molecules

Types of endothermic changeI. Melting II. Evaporation or boilingIII.Sublimation

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Exothermic change

Occurs when an object loses energy to other objects or the environment

Results in more restrictive connections between atoms

Types of exothermic change:I. FreezingII. CondensationIII.Deposition (sublimation)

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Energy transfers associated with water

• Energy released to solidify into ice• Energy absorbed to liquefy into water

• Energy released to condense into liquid• Energy absorbed to vaporize into a gas

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Making Smores• Which material

involved with making a smore undergoes a phase change?

• Endo or Exo changes?

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Fire• Heat from an outside source must be applied to the

combustable material to make it burn (endothermic action)

• The products(hot air, ash) released from the chemical reaction have an increased amount of heat (endo)

• These products lose their heat as the move away from the source of the reaction (exothermic)

• The surrounding environment (air, the ring of rocks that border the fire, the marshmallow, you) become hotter as energy is transferred to you from the products of the fire

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MORE EXAMPLES OF EXOTHERMIC CHANGES

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Condensation

• Convert from gas to liquid

• Dew, the ‘sweating’ of cold bottles on hot summer days

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Condensation: molecules have to slow down

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condensation

• Look at the glasses • During the summer

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Exothermic Change of State

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Can you think of any other examples of condensation?

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Freezing

• Convert from liquid to solid

• Making ice cubes

• The cooling of molten lava to rock

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Solidification

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Freezing?

• What will freeze in this picture in time?

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Deposition (sometimes called sublimation as well)

Gas to solid without turning into a liquid

Frost on the ground

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Frost on ground

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Where else does freezing occur

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MORE EXAMPLES OF ENDOTHERMIC CHANGE

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Evaporation, Boiling

• Convert from liquid to gas

• The drying up of lakes and ponds during the summer

• Boiling water in a pan

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Evaporation of water at the salt flats: energy is transferred to the water

molecules from the sun

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melting

• Convert from solid to liquid

• Making Iron or Titanium

• a chocolate bar left out on blacktop

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Melting

• What loses energy?

• What gains energy?

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Melting of Titanium into ingots

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Where is the energy coming from to melt or sublimate the ice?

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Sublimation

• Direct change from solid to a gas

• Other examples:• Freeze-dried food (coffee)• Ice Cubes getting smaller in freezer• Freezer-burn (too long, improperly wrapped)

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Sublimation Dry Ice – solid carbon Dioxide

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Sweating

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Which phase changes are connected with sweating?

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As you sweat, energy is transferred from your body to the water/oil droplets

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Sweating• Exercising increases the energy in your body

• Some of that energy is transferred to the molecules of water and oil that make up your sweat.

• Those water/oil molecule move through pores, evaporate when no longer confined inside the body, taking heat with them

• The transfer of that heat helps your body cool off

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Example

• Sweating:

• You lose energy (exothermic)• Sweat gains energy (endothermic)• Energy has been transferred, not created or

destroyed

• You feel cooler• Sweat goes from liquid to gas (boiling, evaporation)

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Temperature and phase change

• When substance gains or loses energy, either its temperature or its phase will change, but not both at the same time

• When adding heat to ice, temp will not rise until all ice has melted

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Conservation of mass and energy

• In a closed environment:

• Mass can not be created or destroyed

• Energy can not be created or destroyed

• If some atom/molecule gains energy in some form, another must lose energy in some form

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Conservation of a system

• The amount of mass or energy in a closed system remains constant, but can be rearranged or transformed

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Closed System

• A closed system is a collection of objects that can transfer energy, mass only between themselves

• There is no gain or loss of energy, mass from a closed system

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Extras

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Refrigerators

• The refrigerant in the coils at the back of the refrigerator take out energy from air inside the refrigerator. Refrigerant evaporates inside coils

• Gas flows to outside of refrigerator, releases heat to environment, refrigerant condenses

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Air Conditioners, Heaters

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Air Conditioner• Hot, humid air is sucked in from the room

• Heat is extracted from air and transferred to water in piping

• The cool dry air is recycled back into room

• Water condenses inside the air conditioner

• A fan takes the heat from the water and blows it away from unit outside of home