States of matter Solids and Liquids 1. Gases, Solids, and Liquids Phase Particle Properties...
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Transcript of States of matter Solids and Liquids 1. Gases, Solids, and Liquids Phase Particle Properties...
States of matter Solids and Liquids
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Gases, Solids, and Liquids
Phase
Particle Properties
Spacing Energy Motion Volume Shape
Solid
Liquid
Gas
close low vibrational definite definite
close moderate rotational definite indefinite
far apart high translational indefinite indefinite2
Other States of Matter
Amorphous Solids
Most solids with particles in repeating geometric patterns are crystals. Those with particles arranged randomly are amorphous. Glasses are one type of amorphous solid
Plasmas a. Hot, ionized gas particles. b. Electrically charged. c. Most common state in universe.
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Chumbler - Properties of Matter4
Examples of Plasmas
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PlasmasMicroscopic Explanation for Properties of Plasmas
Plasmas have an indefinite shape and an indefinite volume because the particles can move past one another.
Plasmas are easily compressible because there is a great deal of free space between particles.
Plasmas are good conductors of electricity and are affected by magnetic fields because they are composed of ions (negatively charged electrons and positively charged nuclei).
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PHASE CHANGES
Description of Phase Change
Term for Phase ChangeHeat Movement During
Phase Change
Solid to liquid
MeltingHeat goes into the solid as it melts.
Liquid to solid
FreezingHeat leaves the liquid as it freezes.
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PHASE CHANGES
Description of Phase Change
Term for Phase Change
Heat Movement During Phase Change
Liquid to gas
Vaporization, which includes boiling and evaporation
Heat goes into the liquid as it vaporizes.
Gas to liquid
CondensationHeat leaves the gas as it condenses.
Solid to gas SublimationHeat goes into the solid as it sublimates.
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Heating CurvesThe temperature of most pure substances is constant during a phase change.
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Cooling CurvesThe temperature of most pure substances is constant during a phase change.
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Heat of FusionThe heat required to convert a substance from the solid to the liquid phase is known as the heat of fusion
The heat of fusion is a property of the substance.
For water the heat of fusion is 335 Joules per gram
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Heat of VaporizationThe heat required to convert a substance from the liquid to the gas phase is known as the heat of vaporization
The heat of vaporization for a substance depends on the temperature
For water the heat of vaporization is about 2240 Joules per gram
The heat required to vaporize a substance is generally much higher than the heat it takes to melt it.
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Evaporation• The molecular velocities of the
particles in the liquid phase vary according to a Maxwell-Boltzman distribution
• The faster moving particles at the surface may escape the confines of the liquid entirely.
• Some particles in the vapor phase may be recaptured by the liquid.
• Since the higher energy particles are more likely to escape the average energy of the liquid particles is reduced.
• Evaporation is a cooling effect, while condensation is a warming effect
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Vapor PressureVapor Pressure Explaining Vapor Pressure Explaining Vapor Pressure
on the Molecular Levelon the Molecular Level Dynamic Equilibrium: the point
when as many molecules escape the surface as strike the surface.
Vapor pressure is the pressure exerted when the liquid and vapor are in dynamic equilibrium.
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Vapor Pressure and the Vapor Pressure and the Boiling PointBoiling Point
Liquids boil when the external pressure equals the vapor pressure.
The vapor pressure of a liquid increases with temperature The temperature of boiling point increases as pressure
increases. There are two ways to get a liquid to boil: increase
temperature or decrease pressure. Pressure cookers operate at high pressure. At high
pressure the boiling point of water is higher than at 1 atm. Therefore, there is a higher temperature at which the food is cooked, reducing the cooking time required.
Normal boiling point is the boiling point at 760 torr (1 atm).14
Gas-Liquid Equilibration
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Vapor PressureVapor PressureVolatility, Vapor Pressure, and Volatility, Vapor Pressure, and
TemperatureTemperature
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Phase DiagramsPhase Diagrams A Phase Diagram is a graph of pressure vs. Temperature
summarizing all equilibria between phases. Given a temperature and pressure, phase diagrams tell us
which phase(s) will exist. Key Features of a phase diagram:
Vapor-pressure curve: generally as pressure increases, temperature increases.
Melting point curve: as pressure increases, the solid phase is favored if the solid is more dense than the liquid Triple point: temperature and pressure at which all three phases are in equilibrium.
Normal boiling and melting points (I.e. at 1 atm) Critical point: critical temperature and pressure for the
gas.17
Phase DiagramsPhase Diagrams Any temperature and pressure combination not
on a curve represents a single phase.
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Phase DiagramA phase diagram shows the relationship between the three phases of matter
The boiling point of a substance depends on the pressure.
The melting point is not significantly affected by the pressure
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Phase DiagramThe boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to atmospheric pressure
At the triple point all three phases are in equilibrium
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Phase Diagram of HPhase Diagram of H22OO
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The melting point curve slopes to the left because ice is less dense than water.
Triple point occurs at 0.0098C and 4.58 mmHg.
Normal melting (freezing) point is 0C.
Normal boiling point is 100C. Critical point is 374C and 218
atm.
Phase Diagram of COPhase Diagram of CO22
Carbon Dioxide: Triple point occurs at
-56.4C and 5.11 atm. Normal sublimation point
is -78.5C. (At 1 atm CO2 sublimes it does not melt.)
Critical point occurs at 31.1C and 73 atm.
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Critical Temperature Critical Temperature and Critical Pressure and Critical Pressure
Gases liquefied by increasing pressure at some temperature.
Critical temperature: the minimum temperature for liquefaction of a gas using pressure.
Critical pressure: pressure required for liquefaction.
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Critical Temperature
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Specific HeatSpecific Heat
The ability of a material to absorb and release heat depends on its composition and makeup
The heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a material 1oC is called the specific heat.
For water the specific heat is 4.184 J g-
1oC-1
Phase Change --Phase Change --Problem 1Problem 1
20.0 g of ice at -10.0oC is heated until it melts and the is further heated to a final temperature of 40.0oC. Calculate the total heat change for the ice. The heat of fusion of ice is 335 Jg-1. The specific heat of ice is 2.05 Jg-1 oC-1 and that of liquid water is 4.18 J g-1 oC-1 .
Q = (20.0g)(10.0oC)(2.05 Jg-1 oC-1)+ (20.0g)(335 J g-1) +
(20.0g)(4.18J g-1 oC-1)(40.0oC)
Q = 10454 joules or 10.5 kJ
Phase Change –Problem Phase Change –Problem 22
50.0 g of water at 12.0oC is added to 120.0 g of water at 84.0 oC. Calculate the final temperature of the
water.Let T = final temperature
Then
(50.0g x (T- 12.0 oC)(4.18Jg-1 oC-1) =(120g)(84.0 oC -T)(4.18Jg-1 oC-1)
50T-600 = 10080 – 120 T
170 T = 10680
T = 62.8 oC