Title: Chapter 3 States of Matter
1Chapter 3States of Matter
2Solids, Liquids, and Gases 3.1
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4Describe the States of Matter 3.1
- Use shape and volume as clues to which state
- Solids Definite shape and volume
- Liquids- Definite volume, no definite shape
- Gases No definite shape or volume
- Other States
- 99 of matter in the universe is plasma
- Found on the sun and stars
- Extremely high temperatures
- Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) 5th state of
matter that exists at extremely low temperature
where atoms behave as a single particle
predicted by Bose in 1920s and Einstein decades
before - 1st produced at CU in 1995
5- Amorphous Solids
- Solid or liquid??
- Do not have crystals!
- Can and will flow over time.
- Example glass, wax, plastic
- Small temperature changes affect these (plastic
on a cold day) - Officially, these are liquids!!!
6Kinetic Theory 3.1
- Energy an object has due to its motion
- An object that moves has ke
- The faster object moves, the greater the ke
- All particles of matter are in constant motion
7Explaining the Behavior of Gases 3.1
- Motion in Gases
- Particles never at rest
- Average speed of particles is 1600 km/hr
- Atoms moves in straight line until collides with
something - Collision 1 atom loses ke and slows down other
atom gains ke and speeds up
8Kinetic Theory of Gases 3.1
- Particles in a gas are in constant, random motion
- Motion of 1 particle, unaffected unless particles
collide - Forces of attraction ignored under normally
conditions
9Explaining the Behavior of Liquids 3.1
- Particles always moving
- Move slower than a gas particle
- Greater mass slower speed
- More closely packed particles
- Force of attraction to keep particles close
together
10Explaining the Behavior of Solids 3.1
- Particles vibrate around a fixed location
- Strong attraction among particles
11The Gas Laws 3.2
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13Pressure 3.2
- The result of a force distributed ovan an area
- SI unit force/area
- Force Newtons (N)
- Area square meters (m2)
- N/m2 Pascal (Pa)
14Factors that Affect Gas Pressure 3.2
- Temperature
- Increase in temp? ke increases ? particles
collide more ? increase in pressure - Think of tires in a car
- Volume
- Reducing volume, increases pressure
- Think of your lungs
- Number of particles
- Increasing particles, increases pressure
15Charless Law 3.2
- Jacques Charles (1746-1823)
- Investigated gases
- Absolute Zero 0 K
- No scientist has produced a temp of 0K
- Volume of gas directly proportional to temp in K
if pressure and particles are constant - TEMP MUST BE IN KELVIN
- V1/T1 V2/T2
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17Boyles Law
- Robert Boyle Ireland
- 1st to describe relationship of pressure and
volume of gas - Volume of a gas is inversely proportional to its
pressure if the temp and the number of particles
are constant - P1V1P2V2
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19Combined Gas Law 3.2
http//www.nclark.net/GasLaws
20Phase Changes 3.3
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22Characteristics of Phase Changes 3.3
- Reversible physical change that occurs when a
substance changes from 1 state of matter to
another - 6 common phase changes melting freezing,
vaporization condensation, sublimation, and
deposition
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24Temperature and Phase Changes 3.3
- The temp of substance does not change during a
phase change
25Energy and Phase Changes 3.3
- Energy absorbed or released during a phase change
- Endothermic system absorbs energy
- Ex melting
- Heat of Fusion amount of energy absorbed from a
substance - Fusion melting
- Exothermic Releases energy
- Ex freezing
26Melting and Freezing 3.3
- Molecules become less orderly when substance
melts and more orderly when substance freezes - Melting heat flows from air to ice, ice gains
energy, molecules vibrate more quickly ?
molecules gain enough energy to move from fixed
position - Increases average ke
- Freezing energy flows from water to air, water
cools, average ke decreases, molecules drawn to
an orderly position - Decreases average ke
27Vaporization and Condensation 3.3
- Vaporization liquid to a gas
- Endothermic process (substance must absorb
energy) - Heat of Vaporization Amount of energy it takes
to change from a liquid to a gas - 2 process boiling and evaporation
- Evaporation Liquid to a gas at temp below
boiling point - Molecules at the surface moving fast enough to
escape the liquid - The greater the surface area, the faster the
water evaporates - Vapor Pressure pressure caused by the
collisions of this vapor and the walls of the
container occurs in a closed container - Increases as the temp increases
28- Boiling
- Vapor pressure and temp increases
- When vapor pressure atmospheric pressure, water
boils - Water molecules move faster when heated, bubbles
(boiling) are water vapor - Water vapor is less dense so bubbles rise
- Bubbles burst and releases water vapor into the
air - Boiling point depends on the atmospheric pressure
- At high elevations, the atmospheric pressure is
lower so boiling point is lower so food takes
longer to cook at this lower temp!
29- Condensation
- Phase change in which a substance changes from a
gas or vapor to a liquid - Exothermic process
- Morning dew
- Foggy glass after a shower
30Sublimation and Deposition 3.3
- Sublimation substance changes from a solid to a
gas or vapor - Endothermic change
- Ex dry ice (form of carbon dioxide)
- Deposition gas or vapor changes directly into a
solid - Exothermic change
- Ex frost to form on windows