Title: Four Phases or states of Matter
1 Four Phases or states of Matter
2 Solids
- Constant volume
- Constant shape
- Atoms 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 liquid
- Amorphous solids have no crystal structure
3 Liquids
- Constant volume
- Variable shape
- Incompressible
- Atoms or molecules loosely attracted to its
neighbors, but in close proximity which allows
fluid particles Translational (place to place)
motion
4 Gases
- Variable volume
- Variable shape
- VERY Compressible
- Atoms or molecules are widely separated and have
little interaction with each other aside from
collisions resulting from their Translational
motion
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6 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.
7 Plasma
- Temperature is so high that negative electrons
are separated from their positively charged
atomic nuclei - No molecules exist
- Particles are electrically charged
- Found in Sun, stars, neon bulbs, lightning bolts
and Fusion reactors.
8Direction of Heat Transfer
- Heat ALWAYS travels from a higher concentration
of energy (high temperature) to a lower
concentration of energy (low temperature).
9 Changing Phases or States
- For elements, all four states are possible.
Compounds can be only solids, liquids or gases - PHASE CHANGES occur when energy content changes
- ENERGY PlasmagtGasgtLiquidgtSolid
- Energy content is the cause of the differences
between states or phases at the particle level
10Molecular velocity determines TEMPERATURE and
STATE
- Means cooler material
- If cool enough, particle attractions overcome
motion and they begin to stick together(freezing)
- Means warmer material
- If warm enough, particles have enough energy to
leave the solid surface to liquid
(melting) or the liquid surface to become
gaseous (vaporizing)
11 6 Phase Changes
- Freezing (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)
12 Melting and Freezing
- Changes between liquid and solid
- Freezing is the opposite of melting
- Melting - 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
13 Vaporizing
- Liquid 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
14 Evaporation occurs only from
the surface
15 Evaporation-surface particles only
- Only 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
16Boiling any particle in the sample has enough
energy to travel fast enough to exit the liquid
phase
17 Evaporation (are you sure?)
18 Condensation
19 Condensation
- The opposite of evaporation
- Interaction 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)
20 Sublimation
- Particles going directly from solid state to
gaseous state. - Dry Ice is a good example Dont touch, use
gloves -78C - Sublimation point which is
115colder than you - Extended contact Frost bite
- Dry Ice NEVER melts
- Solids that smell usually do so because of
Sublimation Chocolate particles enter your
nose
21 Deposition
- Hot 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
22Energy and Phase Change
Adding heat at a constant rate
T
Boiling
Melting
Time
23Viscosity is related to flow rate
- Low Viscosity material can flow rapidly
- Water and Alcohol have low viscosity
- High Viscosity material flows slowly
- Motor oil, lava, molasses, honey
- all have high viscosity
24 Pressure
25Boyles 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
26Boyles Law Sample Problem
27Charles Law Volume vs Temperature
28Charles Law Sample problem
29Graphing Reasons and Rules
- Purpose To find how variables relate
- X-axis Independent variable (manipulated)
- Y-axis Dependent variable (responding)
- Slope rise/run rate of change
- Use Predicting values that were previously
unknown - Graphs MUST have TITLES
- Graphs MUST have Labels
- X-axis Independent
- Y-axis Dependent
30Graphing Outcomes
- Directly 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