change of state. the 3 basic states of matter what about plasma?

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Change of State

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Page 1: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Change of State

Page 2: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

The 3 Basic States of Matter

Page 3: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

What about Plasma?

Page 5: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat & Change of State

Adding or removing heat does not always result in a change of temperature.

During a change of state, the heat added is called latent heat because there is no change in temperature.

Latent means "hidden".

Page 6: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Melting

When a solid is melting the heat energy added is building up the energy of the molecules so they can break free of the forces holding them together.

Page 7: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Evaporation or Boiling

Similarly, when liquids are turning to gases the heat energy increases the energy of the molecules so they get further apart and become gas molecules.

Page 8: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat of Fusion (DHf)

Latent heat of fusion is the amount of heat required to melt 1 g of a substance at its melting/freezing point without changing its temperature.

It is also the amount of heat that must be removed to solidify 1 g of a substance at its melting/freezing point without changing its temperature.

Page 9: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat of Vaporization (DHv)

Latent heat of vaporization is the amount of heat required to vaporize 1 g of a substance at its boiling point without changing its temperature.

It is also the amount of heat that must be removed to condense 1 g of a gas at its boiling point without changing its temperature.

Page 10: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Heating Curves

Page 11: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Water

The latent heat of fusion for water is 330 J/g, which means that 330J of energy are needed to change 1 g of ice at 0°C into water at 0°C.

The latent heat of vaporization for water is 2260 J/g, which means that 2260 J of energy are needed to change 1 g of liquid water at 100oC into 1 g of steam at 100oC.

Page 12: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Heating Curves

Page 13: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat Formula

Latent heat can be calculated using the following formula:

Q = mDH

where

Q = the quantity of heat in Joules (J)m = the mass of the material in gDH = the latent heat of the substance in J/g

Page 14: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat Values

Substance Melting Point (oC)

Latent Heat of Fusion DHf (J/g)

Boiling Point (oC)

Latent Heat of

Vaporization DHf (J/g)

Water 0 333 100 2260

Aluminum 659 399 2327 10530

Copper 1083 207 2566 4730

Gold 1063 62.8 2808 1720

Mercury -38.9 11.4 357 296

Nitrogen -210 25.7 -196 200

Oxygen -219 13.9 -183 213

Page 15: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat Applications

Water has one of the highest latent heat of fusion values of all substances and therefore has several applications.

1. Picnic Coolers The heat required to melt the ice comes from the food

or drinks in the cooler. Since heat leaves the food, it gets cold.

2. Preventing Frost Damage When a frost is predicted, farmers will turn on the

water sprinklers. As the water falls on the plants and starts to freeze, heat is released to the surroundings and plants. The heat helps the plants stay warm enough to prevent damage. This only works when the temperature does not drop much below freezing.

Page 16: Change of State. The 3 Basic States of Matter What about Plasma?

Latent Heat Applications

3. Cooling Off When Wet You can cool off your body by just coming out of a

shower or swimming pool if you do not dry off with a towel. When you are wet, heat from your body is used to vaporize the water. Because heat leaves your body, you feel cool. If you don't want to cool off, just dry yourself well with a towel.

4. Avoid Steam Burns When steam condenses it releases heat to the

surroundings. Then the condensed water cools from 100°C to 37°C (body temperature), so even more heat is released and absorbed by the skin. That's why a steam burn is much worse than a burn from boiling water.