unit 10 - gases, liquids and solids

49
Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids General Properties : I. Gases: 1. Expansion 2. Compressible 3. Fluid 4. Low density 5. Diffusion 6. Effusion

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Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids. General Properties : I. Gases: 1. Expansion 2. Compressible 3. Fluid 4. Low density 5. Diffusion 6. Effusion. 7. Condense to liquid 8. No definite shape 9. No definite volume 10. Change volume with Temperature - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

General Properties:I. Gases:

1. Expansion2. Compressible3. Fluid4. Low density5. Diffusion6. Effusion

Page 2: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

7. Condense to liquid

8. No definite shape

9. No definite volume

10. Change volume with Temperature

11. Change volume with Pressure

12. Deposition (to solid)

Fluid: Substance that can flow and take shape of container

Page 3: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

II. Liquids:

1. Definite volume 2. Fluid

3. High density 4. Diffuse

5. Incompressible 6. Dissolve solids

7. Surface tension 8. Boil / evaporate

9. Solidify

Page 4: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

III. Solids:1. Definite shape2. Definite volume3. Not fluid 4. Melt 5. High density6. Incompressible7. Slow diffusion8. Sublimation (solid to gas)9. Rigid form

Page 5: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Diffusion: move from area of high concentration to low concentration

Page 6: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Kinetic Properties (KMT): (Movement)

I. Gases:

1. Tiny particles

2. Constant straight line motion

3. Elastic collisions

4. Little or no attraction forces

5. Average kinetic energy

KE = ½ mv2

Page 7: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

II. Liquids:

1. Tiny particles

2. Constant motion (limited)

3. Elastic collisions

4. Some intermolecular attractions

5. Closely fit together

Page 8: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

III. Solids:

1. Tiny particles

2. Constant vibratory motion

3. Strong intermolecular forces

4. Rarely move position

5. Closely packed (fixed position)

Page 9: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Examples of Gases, Liquids, and Solids

Gases: elements and compounds

Elements: a) monatomic gases – He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn

b) diatomic gases – H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2

Compounds: CO, CO2, NO, NO2, N2O, N2O3, NH3, C2H6, C3H8,

SO2, SO3, AsH3 …..

Page 10: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Liquids: elements and compounds

Elements: Hg, Br

Compounds: HOH, C3H2OH, C3H5(OH)3, C2H5OH, C8H18 …

Page 11: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Solids: elements and compounds

Elements: most metals (Except Hg)

nonmetals P, S, I, C

Compounds: NaCl, NaHCO3, CuSO4,

MgSO4, AlNa(SO4)2,

C6H12O6, C12H22O11…

Page 12: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

1) Crystalline: crystal lattice (3-D)

Shapes: unit cells – cubic, body center or face center

Basic crystal systems:

a) isomeric cubic d) orthorhombic

b) tetragonal e) monoclinic

c) trigonal f) triclinic

g) hexagonal

Types of Solids

Page 13: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Types of Crystals

1) Ionic – Hard, Brittle, High melting pt.

examples: NaCl, CuSO4, AgNO3

2) Covalent – Soft, Low melting pt.

examples: NH3, HOH, CH4

3) Network - hardness vary, High MP

examples: diamond, graphite, quartz

4) Metallic – MP range, hardness range

examples: Cu, Fe, Al,…

Page 14: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Forming Crystals: evaporation or from magma SLOW cooling: large perfect crystal

Defect: flaws (mistake in crystals)

a) foreign atom /ion (changes color )

b) internal misalignment (fuzzy)

c) dislocation - edge - screwed

Edge dislocation: extra layer of atoms extends part of the way into a crystal

Screwed dislocation: unequal growth while the crystal form

Page 15: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

2) Microcrystalline Fullerines / Buckyballs contain carbon (graphite)16–128atoms

sulfur 4 – 8 atoms phosphorus 30 +/- atoms

Properties: strong, durable, hollow, fluffy shapes are spheres or tubes network bonding

Examples: tennis racket frames golf club shafts airplanes frame / outer covering

Page 16: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Types of Solids:3) Amorphous: is also called meta-stable

liquids or super -cooled liquids

Properties: -melting pt range

-weak intermolecular forces

-temperature sensitive

-random molecular arrangement

Examples: Glass, Rubber, Plastics, Waxes

Page 17: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Phases

Page 18: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Below 0oC

Page 19: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Phase Changes

G

L

S

Deposition

I. Chart-

Condense

SolidifyMelt

Evaporate/boil

Sublimation

Page 20: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

T

E

M

P

E N E R G Y

S

L

G

solidifymelt

boilcondense

II. Graph-

add energy

release energy

Page 21: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

III. Diagram-

Temp

1 atm

P

4

1 2

3

S L

G

1. Melting Pt

2. Boiling Pt

3. Triple pt

4. Critical pt

Page 22: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

TermsMelting: solid to liquid (add heat)Evaporation: liquid to gas without boilingBoiling: change of liquid to bubbles of vapor

that appear throughout the liquidCondensation: gas to liquid (release heat)Solidification/Freezing: liquids to solidsSublimation: solid to gas without becoming

a liquid Ex: I2, CO2, paradichlorobenzeneDeposition: gas to solid without passing liq.

Page 23: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Get your thinking caps on this will

be FUN!!!!!!

Page 24: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Holy Moley!!!!!

Page 25: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Le Chatelier & Stress

I’ll start will an easy concept!

Page 26: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Equilibrium (Le Chatelier & Stress)

Open System:

Evaporation

cool

Condensation

Room Temp

Page 27: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Closed System:

Dynamic Equilibrium:

evaporation = condensation

at one specific temperature

Equilibrium: Two Opposing changes occur at equal rate

Page 28: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Boiling Point

Boil at same temperature until all liquid has vaporized

Boiling Point changes with

Pressure and / or Altitude changes :

Increase pressure, BP (pressure cooker)

Decrease pressure, BP (high Mt range)

Vapor pressure=atmospheric pressure

Page 29: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

BOILING and ELEVATION

• DEATH VALLEY CA 100.3C

• HAZLET NJ 100.0C

• BOULDER CO 94.0C

• LEADVILLE CO 89.0C

• MT WHITNEY CA 85.0C

• MT McKINLEY CA 79.0C

• MT EVEREST TIBET 70.0C

Page 30: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Stress Heat or Cool:

Implode

Equilibrium will shift to ease stress

HEAT COOLExplosion

Page 31: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids
Page 32: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids
Page 33: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

WaterOcean (saltwater), river, lakes and glaciers

(freshwater), cover about 75% of earth’s surface. Living things are 70% - 90% HOH.

Physical Properties of Water: 1. Ice(s), Water(l), Vapor(g)2. Angular molecule O

1050 H H

Page 34: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

3.Colorless, transparent, odorless, tasteless 4. Intermolecular forces (Hydrogen bond)

5. Highly polar

6. Rigid structure as solid “hex” shape

7. Most dense 4oC

8. FP 0oC / BP 100oC at STP

9. D(l) = 1.00 g/cm3

10. D(s) = .917 g/cm3 Ice floats in water

11. D(g) = .000748 g/cm3 as vapor

Page 35: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

12. Hf = 334 joules/g; Hv = 2260 j/g

13. Csp = 4.18 j/goC (l); 2.06 j/goC (s) ;

2.02 j/goC (g)

14. Universal solvent

Chemical Properties of Water:

1. Stable under standard conditions (STP)

STP= standard temperature (0oC) and pressure (1 atm)

Page 36: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

2. React with active metals H2

2 Na + 2 HOH 2NaOH + H2

3. It decomposes to H2 and O2

4. Metal oxide + HOH Bases

BaO + HOH Ba(OH)2

5. Nonmetal Oxide + HOH Acids

SO3 + HOH H2SO4

6. It promotes chemical changes.

Aqueous reactions

Page 37: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Used as a Standard for:

1. Temperature at sea level(thermometer)

2. Pressure (Barometer)

3. Volume (Liter)

4. Mass (Gram)

5. Density (specific gravity)

6. Heat (calorie/joule)

Page 38: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Heavy Water:

D2O (deuterium oxide)

a) 2400 liters HOH 83 ml D2O

b) more dense d= 1.2 g/cm3

c) BP 101.4 oC / MP 3.8 oC

d) used as “tracer” in chem RXNs

chemical and biological

Page 39: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Terms:

1. Water of crystallization: homogeneous particles bounded by surface making definite angles. The slower the crystals form, the more perfect they are.

2. Hydrated crystal: a crystallized substance containing HOH

3. Anhydrate: substance without water

Page 40: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

4. Effervescence: rapid evolution of small gas bubbles5. Efflorescence: hydrated crystals lose HOH when expose to the air

Ex: Na2CO3.10HOH fast process

CuSO4.5HOH slow process

6. Deliquence: take up water from the air

Ex: NaOH fast / CaCl2 slow 7. Hydroscope: insoluble material take up

water vapor from the airEx: hair, wool, silk

Page 41: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

8. Miscible: two liquids can dissolve freely in one another in any portion.

Ex: water + isopropanol

9. Immiscible: two liquids are not soluble in each other. Ex: water + oil

Page 42: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

10. Effuse: gas particles pass through a tiny opening

11. Viscosity: the resistance of a liquid to flow. Ex: syrup

12. Lattice: 3-D arrangement of particles of a crystal

13. Unit cell: 3-D pattern of the entire lattice (repeating pattern)

Page 43: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids
Page 44: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Holy Moley Math!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Page 45: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

MATH CONCEPTS Remember the rules

sig fig sig fig sig fig

sci not sci not sci not

UNITS

Page 46: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Csp = specific heat capacity; energy needed to raise 1.00 g of substance 1.0 oC

metals – low Csp

nonmetals – moderate Csp

compounds – varied Csp

H = m x Csp x T

H: energy in calories or joules m: mass

Csp: heat capacity T: change in temp.

Page 47: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

Ex: A 15.00 g sample of HOH is raised from 21oC to 37 oC. How much energy is needed?

H = 15.0 g x 4.18 j/goC x (37-21) oC

= 1003 joules

Page 48: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

FIN

Page 49: Unit 10 - Gases, Liquids and Solids

This is what you need for HeavyWater