Changing States of Matter Concept Map 5 States
- Slides: 16
Changing States of Matter
Concept Map
5 States of Matter 3 Most Common States of Matter on Earth § Solids: Definite Shape and volume § Liquids: No definite shape but have a definite volume § Gases: No definite shape or volume. Uncommon States of Matter on Earth § Plasma § Bose-Einstein Condensates
Solids Two types of solids § Crystalline solids-also called true solids. Have a lattice structure. Most common. § Amorphous solids-no specific melting point § Solids have tightly packed (contracted) particles that are always vibrating slowly
Liquids • Liquids move a little faster than solids and their particles slide (expanding )with each other at this state. • Liquids have viscosity, the resistance to flow so the slower the liquid flows the more viscosity.
Gases • Gases are particles with high average kinetic energy. • Particles are no longer in constant contact (expanded). They collide and bounce off each other • The space between particles allows them to be compressed.
Plasma • Plasmas have very high energy • Electrons separate from the atoms and become ionized. “Free electrons. ” • No definite shape or volume, move as one particle. • Most common state of matter in the universe
Bose-Einstein Condensates • Just a fraction above absolute zero (0 Kelvin) and only for some elements – a BEC occurs. • The atoms start behaving like little waves and start overlapping one another until they eventually act like one wave and essentially become a superatom. • They are not bonded or mixed – they have become indistinguishable from one another, having the same qualities and existing in the same place. Bose-Einstein Condensates
Heat and Temperature • Heat is the amount of thermal energy. • Latent heat is the amount of heat needed to change from one state of matter to another. • Heat is measured in Joules • Temperature is the average amount of kinetic energy of the particles in a substance • Temperature is measured in Celsius or Kelvin
Heating Curve of Water
Changes in Heat • Latent Heat of Fusion is the amount of heat needed to break the bonds of a solid and turn it to a liquid. • Latent Heat of Vaporization is the amount of heat needed to move a liquid to a gas
Phase Changes When Energy is increased… • Solid to Liquid-melting or Fusion • Liquid to gas-vaporization (boiling from bottom or evaporation from surface) • Gas to plasma-ionization • Solid to gas-sublimation Sublimation of Iodine
Phase Changes When energy decreases… • • Gas to liquid-condensation Liquid to solid-freezing Gas to solid-deposition Plasma to gas-recombination or deionization
Phase Change diagram
Pressure and Temperature Lowering or increasing the pressure changes the temperature at which phase changes occur. § 1 atmosphere is STP (standard temp and pressure). 101 k. Pa and 760 mm. Hg (millimeters of Mercury) are equivalent measurements. § When you lower the pressure you lower the temperature at which a phase change will occur § When you increase the pressure you in increase the temperature at which a phase change will occur
Phase Diagram Extras § The Triple Point is when there is equilibrium and all solid, liquid and gas all exist at the same temp and pressure at the same time § Critical points are where two phases merge into a single phase and are identical-exist as gases
- Phase change concept map
- Classification of matter concept map
- Changing states of matter
- Composition of matter concept map
- Classification of matter section 1 composition of matter
- Grey matter in nervous system
- Composition of matter section 1
- Chapter 2 section 1 classifying matter answer key
- Cerebral aqueduct
- Section 1 composition of matter
- Gray matter and white matter
- Pallium telencephalon
- Ecological succession
- Basic concepts of matter
- States of matter foldable
- Four phases of matter
- Four states of matter