State of Matter
State of Matter
State of Matter
October/November 2010
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
May/June 2010
VOLUME
No fixed volume.
Volume Fixed volume Fixed volume It expands to fill
its container
IMPORTANT PROPERTIES
➢ All three states show an increase in volume [EXPANSION] when the temperature is increased, and a decrease in
volume [CONTRACTION] when the temperature is lowered.
➢ The volume of a gas at a fixed temperature can easily be reduced by increasing the pressure of the gas.
➢ Gases are easily compressed, liquids are only slightly compressible, and volume of a solid is unaffected by changing
the pressure
CHANGE OF STATE
Sublimation
Melting: a pure substance melts suddenly at
a particular temperature.
Melt Evaporate
Increase in Temperature
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
October/November 2012 V12
MELTING, BOILING AND FREEZING POINTS:
Decreasing Temperature
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
evaporation
condensation
SUBLIMATION (R.O.)
Sublimation: The process in which a solid changes directly to a gas is called sublimation [Not required ].
➢ The melting point can be measured using an electrically heated melting point apparatus.
➢ The presence of an impurity in a substance: (lowers the melting point & raise the boiling point)
➢ Impure substance sometimes melts or boils over a range of temperatures, not a particular point.
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
The State of a substance at a given temperature can be predicted if its melting point and boiling point are known. The
table summarizes how to work this out:
Be careful with temperatures below 0ºC; -100ºC is a higher temperature than -150ºC.
THE KINETIC THEORY OF MATTER
The idea that all substances consist of very SMALL PARTICLES used to explain the structure of the
three different states of matter.
The kinetic theory of matter describes these states, and the changes between them, in terms of the
MOVEMENT of particles.
Solid Liquid Gas
THE MAIN POINTS OF THE KINETIC THEORY:
- All matter is made up of very small particles (different substances contain different types of particles)
Atom Molecule
- The Particles are moving all the time (Movement and arrangement of particles is different )
• All particles have energy The higher the temperature the faster they move.
Increasing Energy
• In a gas, there is relatively large distance between particles. They are free to
Move anywhere [i.e. a gas can fill any volume]
Decreasing Energy
• The pressure of a gas is produced by the atoms of molecules of the gas hitting the walls of the container. The more
often the particles collide with the walls, the greater the pressure.
THE MAIN POINTS OF KINETIC THEORY:
• There are spaces between particles of matter called INTERMOLECULAR SPACE (IMS)
• In a gas, the intermolecular space is large and can be reduced by increasing EXTERNAL PRESSURE
– gases are COMPRESSIBLE.
2) Table below shows the melting and boiling points of four substances A-D:
a) In which of these four substances are the particles arranged in a lattice (a regular structure) at room temperature?
THE PRESSURE AND TEMPERATURE OF A GAS
➢ They collide with each other and also hit the sides of the
balloon and exert pressure on it.
➢ Gas Pressure: The pressure of a gas is produced by the atoms or molecules of the gas hitting the walls of the
container.
The faster
The more
Thus, the they move,
When The particles they hit the
particles the more
temperature energy wall, the
move they hit the
increases increases greater the
faster wall of the
pressure
container
THE RANDOM MOTION OF PARTICLES
➢ In solids such as stones and rocks, the particles don’t move freely.
➢ It’s the random movement of particles from region of high concentration to region of low
concentration.
➢ Diffusion contributes to the movement of oxygen from the lungs to the blood, and of carbon dioxide
from the blood to the lungs.
➢ Diffusion does not take place in solids.
➢ When you walk past a cosmetics counter in a department store you can usually smell the perfumes.
➢ For this to happen gas particles must be leaving open perfume bottles and be spreading out
through the air in the store.
➢ After a day the brown–red fumes of gaseous bromine have spread evenly throughout both gas jars from the liquid
present in the lower gas jar.
➢ Gases diffuse at different rates.
➢ This shows the position at which the two gases meet and react.
➢ The white cloud forms in the position shown because the ammonia particles are lighter and have a smaller
relative molecular mass than the hydrogen chloride particles (released from the hydrochloric acid) and so
move faster.
EXAMPLE OF DIFFUSION IN LIQUID
➢ Gases diffuse because the particles collide with other particles, and bounce off in all directions.
➢ But gases do not all diffuse at the same rate, every time.
FACTORS AFFECTING THE RATE OF GAS DIFFUSION
• The Temperature
EXPERIMENT SHOWS HOW MOLECULAR MASS AFFECTS THE RATE
OF DIFFUSION
➢ The particles in hydrogen chloride gas are twice as heavy as those in ammonia gas.
➢ So, the ammonia particles have travelled further than the hydrogen chloride particles.
➢ When particles collide and bounce away, the lighter particles will bounce further
➢ The lower the mass of its particles, the faster a gas will diffuse.
➢ So we can also say: The lower its relative molecular mass, the faster a gas will diffuse.
October/November 2011
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
October/November 2007:
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
May/June 2012
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
May/June 2008
PRACTICE QUESTION(S)
October/November 2009
THE END OF LECTURE