Four Phases or states of Matter Solid Liquid Gas Plasma.
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Transcript of Four Phases or states of Matter Solid Liquid Gas Plasma.
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Four Phases or states of Matter
Solid
LiquidGas
Plasma
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Solids Constant volumeConstant shapeAtoms or molecules are well ordered into a crystal lattice for most materials
Particles have VIBRATIONAL motion ONLY
Exceptions Glass which is a very slow flowing liquidAmorphous solids have no crystal structure
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LiquidsConstant volumeVariable shapeIncompressibleAtoms or molecules loosely attracted to its neighbors, but in close proximity which allows fluid particles Translational (place to place) motion
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GasesVariable volumeVariable shapeVERY CompressibleAtoms or molecules are widely separated and have little interaction with each other aside from collisions resulting from their Translational motion
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Water is strange!Water expands as it forms a solid. This causes the density of ice to be less than liquid water and, therefore, ice floats in liquid water. Note the structure of liquid water (left) and ice (right). Notice the greater space in the organized crystalline ice structure which is the cause of the expansion. Germanium also does this.
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PlasmaTemperature is so high that negative electrons are separated from their positively charged atomic nuclei
No molecules existParticles are electrically chargedFound in Sun, stars, neon bulbs, lightning bolts and Fusion reactors.
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Direction of Heat TransferHeat ALWAYS travels from a higher
concentration of energy (high temperature) to a lower concentration of energy (low temperature).
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Changing Phases or StatesFor elements, all four states are possible. Compounds can be only solids, liquids or gases
PHASE CHANGES occur when energy content changes
ENERGY: Plasma>Gas>Liquid>Solid
Energy content is the cause of the differences between states or phases at the particle level
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Molecular velocity determines TEMPERATURE and STATESlow moving molecules
Means cooler materialIf cool enough, particle
attractions overcome motion and they begin to stick together(freezing)
Fast moving moleculesMeans warmer materialIf warm enough,
particles have enough energy to leave the solid surface to liquid (melting) or the liquid surface to become gaseous (vaporizing)
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6 Phase ChangesFreezing (liquid to solid)Melting(solid to liquid)Vaporization (evaporation or boiling)(liquid to gas)
Condensation(gas to liquid)Sublimation(solid to gas- skip liquid)
Deposition(gas to solid- skip liquid)
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Melting and FreezingChanges between liquid and solidFreezing is the opposite of meltingMelting - Attractions between solid particles break when energy is added and vibrations increase until they escape into liquid state
Freezing - Particles move slowly enough that attractions can pull particles together to form solid
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VaporizingLiquid particles break the attractions of neighboring particles and travel up into the gaseous layer Evaporation- only particles near the surface have enough energy (traveling fast enough) to break the attractions
Boiling – particles throughout the liquid are traveling fast enough to form bubbles with higher pressure than outside conditions. Boiling Point
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Evaporation – occurs only from the surface
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Evaporation-surface particles onlyOnly particles near the surface have enough energy to become a gas
Liquid particles take energy from the liquid to enter gaseous state which cools the liquid
The gas layer can also cool because of the influx of slower moving gas particles
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Boiling –any particle in the sample has enough energy to travel fast enough to exit the liquid phase
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Evaporation (are you sure?)
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Condensation
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CondensationThe opposite of evaporationInteraction of high energy particles with a cooler surface to form liquid
Evaporation and Condensation occur usually on the SURFACE
Gas particles release heat to rejoin the liquid (Exothermic)
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SublimationParticles going directly from
solid state to gaseous state.Dry Ice is a good example: Don’t touch, use gloves -78˚C - Sublimation point which is 115˚colder than you
Extended contact = Frost bite
Dry Ice NEVER meltsSolids that smell usually do
so because of Sublimation: Chocolate particles enter your nose
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DepositionHot gaseous atoms
forming a layer of solid on a cooler surface: manmade Diamonds are gaseous Carbon on a seed crystal
Can be used to form a layer of thin expensive metal on cheap metal base
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Energy and Phase Change
T
Time
Adding heat at a constant rate
Melting
Boiling
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Viscosity is related to flow rateLow Viscosity – material can flow rapidly
Water and Alcohol have low viscosity
High Viscosity – material flows slowlyMotor oil, lava, molasses, honey
all have high viscosity
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Pressure
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Boyle’s Law Pressure vs Volume Relationship
P1 x V1 = P2 x V2 Original New
Decrease the volume of a gas causes a higher pressure.
Increase the Volume of a gas causes a lower pressure. Indirect Relationship
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Boyle’s Law Sample Problem
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Charles’ Law = Volume vs Temperature
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Charles’ Law Sample problem
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Graphing Reasons and Rules
Purpose: To find how variables relateX-axis: Independent variable (manipulated)Y-axis: Dependent variable (responding)Slope = rise/run = rate of changeUse = Predicting values that were previously
unknownGraphs MUST have TITLESGraphs MUST have Labels
X-axis IndependentY-axis Dependent
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Graphing OutcomesDirectly proportional : A is up & B is up
Indirectly proportional : A is up but B is down
Straight line graph: varying at a constant rate
Curved line graph: varying at a changing rate