liquids and solids the condensed states of matter chapter 10.2 – 10.3

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Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

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Page 1: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Liquids and Solids

The Condensed States of Matter

Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Page 2: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

A Model for Liquids

Liquid molecules are free to slide past each other, so liquids, like gases, can flow.

Page 3: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Vaporization is…

the conversion of a liquid to a gas or vapor.

If the conversion occurs at the surface of a liquid that is not boiling, the process is called evaporation.

Evaporation is a cooling process. The particle with the highest kinetic energy tend to escape first, leaving cooler particles behind.

Page 4: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Vapor Pressure is…

pressure that results from the vapor particles colliding with the walls of the container.

It is a force due to a gas above the surface of a liquid.

(Vapor is the gaseous state of a substance that is a liquid or solid at room temperature).

Page 5: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Phase changes with liquids

Evaporation… Liquid Vapor (gas)

Condensation… Vapor (gas) Liquid

Page 6: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Equilibrium vapor pressure…

When the rate of vaporization is equal to the rate of condensation, no net change in vapor pressure occurs.

This is a dynamic equilibrium.

Page 7: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Temperature affects the rate of vaporization

Increasing the temperature of a contained liquid increases the vapor pressure over the surface of a liquid.

Page 8: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Boiling

Boiling occurs when the vapor pressure is equal to the external pressure.

In Denver, where atmospheric pressure is low, boiling occurs at a lower temperature.

In a pressure cooker, boiling occurs at a higher temperature.

Page 9: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Boiling point…

the temperature at which boiling occurs.

Normal boiling point is the temperature at which boiling occurs at 1 atm pressure (normal pressure).

Boiling is also a cooling process.

Page 10: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

The Nature of Solids

The particles in a solid tend to vibrate about fixed points. They are not free to flow.

Most solids are highly organized, dense and incompressible.

Page 11: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Melting point….

the temperature at which a solid turns into a liquid.

Melting…. Solid liquid

Freezing… Liquid solid

Page 12: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Solids

Crystal Unit cell Allotrope

• Several forms of carbon

Amorphous solids (glass, soot) Supercooled solids Network solids (diamonds, graphite)

Page 13: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Sublimation…

the change of a substance from a solid to a vapor without passing through the liquid state.

Sublimation… Solid vapor

Deposition… Vapor solid

Page 14: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Phase diagrams

Triple point describes the set of conditions where all three phases, solid, liquid, and gas, can exist in equilibrium with each other.

Page 15: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Phase diagram for water

Page 16: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Phase diagram for CO2

Page 17: Liquids and Solids The Condensed States of Matter Chapter 10.2 – 10.3

Heating curve