Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter,...

13
Energy and Phase Changes

description

Endothermic process Solid to a Liquid  Melting (Fusion) particles overcome attractive forces and move around & past other particles Solid to a Gas  Sublimation occurs only at conditions far from normal MP Liquid to a Gas  Vaporization particles are very spread out – requires a lot of energy evaporation – vaporization at the surface of a liquid

Transcript of Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter,...

Page 1: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Energy and Phase Changes

Page 2: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Energy Requirements for State Changes

• To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Page 3: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Endothermic process• Solid to a Liquid Melting (Fusion)

• particles overcome attractive forces and move around & past other particles

• Solid to a Gas Sublimation• occurs only at conditions far from normal MP

• Liquid to a Gas Vaporization• particles are very spread out – requires a lot of

energy• evaporation – vaporization at the surface of a

liquid

Page 4: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Exothermic processes

• Gas to a Liquid Condensation(equal and opposite of vaporization)

• Liquid to a solid Solidification(equal and opposite of melting)

Gas to a solid Deposition(equal and opposite of sublimation)

Page 5: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Heating curveA heating curve • illustrates the changes of state as a

solid is heated to a gas.• uses sloped lines to show an increase

in temperature.• uses plateaus (flat lines) to indicate a

change of state.• A cooling curve shows the opposite

process

Page 6: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.
Page 7: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Heat of fusionThe heat of fusion • is the amount of heat released when 1 gram of

liquid freezes (at its freezing point). • is the amount of heat needed to melt 1 gram of

a solid (at its melting point).• For water (at 0°C) =

334 J 1 g water

Page 8: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

The heat needed to freeze (or melt) a specific mass of water (or ice) is calculated using the heat of fusion.

Heat = g water x 334 J 1 g water

Example: How much heat is needed to melt 15.0 g of water?

15.0 g water x 334 J = 5.01 kJ

1 g water

Page 9: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Heat of vaporizationThe heat of vaporization is the amount of heat• absorbed to vaporize 1 g of a liquid to gas at the boiling

point.• released when 1 g of a gas condenses to liquid at the

boiling point.

Boiling Point of Water = 100°C

Heat of Vaporization (water) = 2260 J 1 g water

Page 10: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

• The heat needed to vaporize (or boil) a specific mass of water (or water vapor/steam) is calculated using the heat of vaporization.

Heat = g water x 2260 J 1 g water

Example: How much heat is needed to boil 12.0 g of water?

12.0 g water x 2260 J = 27.1 kJ

1 g water

Page 11: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Practice• Calculate the heat of vaporization of

25 g of water (in kJ).

• From this calculate the heat of vaporization of water in kJ/mol.

Page 12: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Heating curve calculations

• For heating (same phase): q = C.m ΔT• For phase changes: heat of fusion or

vaporization

Page 13: Energy and Phase Changes. Energy Requirements for State Changes To change the state of matter, energy must be added or removed.

Example• How much heat do you need to melt

10 g of ice and then heat that to 10 oC?

• Melting: 10 g x 334 J/g = 3340 J• Heating: 10 g x 4.184 J/(g.oC) x 10 oC =

418.4 J• Total heat needed: 3340 J + 418 J =

3758 J