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CHAPTER 12 STATES OF MATTER 4 STATES OF MATTER Gases Liquids Solids Plasma (Ice Ice Baby Rap) Dance KINETIC MOLECULAR THEORY (KMT)- describes the behavior of particles in terms of their motion Explains the effect of temp. and pressure on matter KMT video Molecules in Motion Song Assumptions for KMT- gases 1. Particle size- all matter is composed of small particles Between the particles is empty space There are no attractive or repulsive forces between particles 2. Particle motion- particles are in constant random motion Travel in straight line paths Change direction upon collision Collisions are elastic (no net loss of kinetic energy [KE]) 3. Particle energy- kinetic energy (KE) is a factor of mass and velocity of a particle KE= energy an object possesses because of its motion Formula: KE = 1/2mv2 Depends on mass and velocity PRESSURE Dependent on force of collision and the # of collisions Pressure = force area Atmospheric pressure- (Barometric) results from the collisions of air molecules w/objects on earth Varies depending on location Tools for measuring pressure Manometer = device use to measure pressure of enclosed gas Barometer = special manometer used to measure atmospheric pressure Developed Aneroid barometer by Torricelli Standard Atmospheric Pressure Average pressure at sea level = 760 mmHg (millimeters of mercury) Units for pressure: Pascal (Pa) = 1 Newton m2 1000 Pa = 1kPa Standard atmospheric pressure = 101.3 kPa Also known as 1 atm (atmosphere) Pressure Conversion Factor 101.3 kPa = 1 atm= 760 mmHg = 760 torr = 14.7 psi Example: 216.9 kPa = _____________ mmHg 216.9 kPa 760 mmHg 101.3 kPa 1627 mmHg 763 mmHg = ______________kPa 763 mmHG 101.3 kPa 760 mmHg 102 kPa TEMPERATURE DEFINITION: measure of the average KE of the particles in a substance (> temp. = > KE) If you have 2 substances at same temp., they must have the same average KE, so the molecule w/the less mass will move faster Ex: O2 and H2 at 20°C 32 g/mole 2 g/mole -so H2 has the > velocity ABSOLUTE ZERO Temperature at which the motion of particles ceases (stops moving) Absolute zero = -273°C Absolute zero KE KE = 0 -273 0 Temp. °C 100 Supernova remnent (star death) Spitzer Space Telescope Launched August 24, 2003 With this new infrared telescope, only the science instrument chamber and a compact cryostat will be cold at launch, chilled to about 1.5 Kelvin (-272 Celsius, or -457 Fahrenheit). Following launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, the spacecraft cooled in the deep recesses of space for about five weeks. The observatory uses the vapor from the boil-off of its cryogen fluid to cool the telescope assembly down to its optimal operating temperature of 5.5 Kelvin (-268 Celsius, or -450 Fahrenheit). cryogen depletion date 5/15/09 (now in warm mission- two of its arrays still working) James Webb Vega (dust cloud around) A Joke Break… Q: What did the thermometer say to the graduated cylinder? A: "You may have graduated but I've got many degrees" Ha, Ha, Ha, again I crack myself up. TEMPERATURE SCALES Farenheit- 32°F= freezing water; 212°F= boiling water Celcius- based scale on freezing point of water = 0°C; boiling = 100°C Kelvin- based on absolute zero; 0 K = -273°C (a change of 1 degree on K scale is same on °C) Conversion factor K = °C + 273 Example: 298 25 ° C = ___________K 127 400 K = ____________ °C Use for temperature: Determine direction of energy flow When a cool object (less KE) is in contact w/a warmer object (higher KE) the energy of the warmer object will transfer to the cooler until the KE is equal or same temp. Heat (em cee delta tee song) The energy transferred due to a temp. difference Physical and chemical changes are accompanied by energy changes Heat (Q) – energy transferred from a hotter object to a cooler object due to a temp. difference Exothermic- released energy; gives off heat or light Endothermic- absorbs energy; cool to the touch LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY ENERGY CAN BE CONVERTED FROM ONE FORM TO ANOTHER BUT IT IS NOT CREATED NOR DESTROYED Activation energy = the minimum amount of energy needed to get a reaction started UNITS FOR HEAT Joule (J)- quantitative measurement of an energy change or heat English system uses a calorie (cal) Conversion factors 1 cal = 4.18 J 1000 cal = 1 Cal (food value) = 1 kcal little”c” big “C” Ex. 1 tic tac = 4180 J or 1 Cal Orange Juice 340 kJ (80 Cal) SPECIFIC HEAT Constant The heat needed to raise the temp. of 1 g of a substance 1°C or 1 K Represented with the letter “c” Unit= J/g°C Ex: c water = 4.18 J/g°C MEASURING ENERGY CHANGES CALORIMETER- device used to measure energy changes Usually contains water Measures heat absorbed or released Follows Law of conservation of Energy 1. Formula for heat Q = m c rT Heat lost or gained = (mass in grams)(specific heat constant)(change in temp) How much heat is needed to heat up 145g of water from 25.0 C to 95.0 C? Specific heat of water= 4.18 J/g C. 2. Finding specific heat of unknown substance Heat lost = heat gained by water Q lost = Q gained Q lost = mcrT Q gained = mcrT so, mcrTlost = mcrTgained A piece of metal with a mass of 35.0 g and a temperature of 100.0 C is placed into 105.0 g of water at a temperature of 25.0C. After the metal cools the final temperature of the system is 31.5 C. What is the specific heat of the metal? Lab- Specific Heat Data (w/ units) Calculations: (do for each metal) 1. Mass of water (data #3- data #2) 2. Change in temp. water (data #6- data #5) 3. Change in temp metal (data #4 – data # 6) mcrTlost = mcrTgained (data #1) c (calc #3)=(calc # 1) 4.18 (calc #2) (solve for c) % Error= O (above) – A x 100 A Also: Questions & Conclusion What is the pressure in atmospheres if the pressure is 742 mm Hg? If a book with a force or weight of 25 N is laying flat on a table covers a surface that is .20 m by .35 m, what is the pressure it is applying to the table? A piece of unknown metal with mass of 14.9 g is heated to 100.0 C and dropped into 75.0 g of water that was at 20.0 C. The final temperature of the system is 28.5 C. What is the specific heat of the metal? Lab- Calories of Food How to use the Lab Pro Data (w/ units) Calculations (one for each food item) 1. Change in temp (data 7- data 8) 2. . mass of water (data #4- data #5) 3. Heat lost by food= Heat gained water Q lost= mc Δ t (water) Q = (calc. #2) (4.18) (calc #1) 4. Convert heat lost (joules to cal) Calc #3/ 4.18 5. Mass of food burned (data #1- data#2) 6. Heat lost by 1 gram of food calories (calc #4) / mass of food (calc #5) 7. % Error Calc #6- accepted value x 100 Accepted value Questions (1,2) and conclusion STATES OF MATTER Describing the kinetic theory as it applies to the states of matter Dance INTRAMOLECULAR FORCES Attractive forces that hold particles together in ionic or covalent bonds (intra= within) INTERMOLECULAR FORCES Forces of attraction between particles (holding similar particles close together like in a solid or liquid) Intermolecular forces video Types: van der Waals Dispersion forces Dipole-dipole forces (polar molecules) Hydrogen bond (special type of dipole-dipole force) GAS Gas video Independent particles moving in straight lines Change direction with collision Travel randomly Assume shape and volume of container Large amount of empty space No attraction force compressible Gas properties: Fluidity- gas particles glide and flow past each other Expansion- fill any container Compressibility- can decrease volume Diffusion- spontaneous mixing of 2 gases; flow until evenly dispersed; flow from area of higher concentration to lower Graham’s Law of Diffusion- proportion comparing diffusion rate Rate A = molar mass B Rate B molar mass A Ex: HCl and NH3 Molar mass = 36.5 Rate NH3 = molar mass HCl Rate HCl molar mass NH3 = 36.5 17.0 = 1.5 So NH3 diffuses 1.5 x faster molar mass = 17.0 LIQUID Properties video Form of matter that flows, has constant volume and takes the shape of its container Particles are in motion but slower than gases (slip/slide motion) Particles are held together by weak intermolecular forces (don’t have enough KE to break away from the attraction) Reduced amount of empty space Properties of Liquids Density and compression Liquids are denser than their gas phase Liquids can be compressed, but an enormous amount of pressure must be applied to reduce the volume by just a small proportion Fluidity Liquids flow and can be diffused (yet not as well as gases) Viscosity Measure of a liquids resistance to flow (stronger the attractive force, the higher the viscosity) Viscosity increases w/a decrease in temp. (cold oil doesn’t flow well as warm) Molecules w/longer chains have higher viscosity Surface Tension A property of liquid surfaces that causes the surface layer to behave like a thin elastic 'skin'. Molecules in a liquid have attractive forces that hold them together. Molecules on the surface are attracted to molecules from all sides and below, but not from above . Surfactants- (soap/detergent); compounds that lower the surface tension of water Capillary action Force of adhesion between a liquid and a solid Ex: meniscus in graduated cylinder Cellulose fibers in paper towel wicking up water (water suspension) SOLID Properties video-solid Particles are packed against one another in a highly organized fashion Move much slower, don’t slide from place to place but vibrate & rotate about fixed points (straight line paths w/neighbors) Definite pattern in arrangement of particles Definite shape and definite volume Dense and incompressible Crystals All true solids are crystals A substance in which the particles are arranged in an orderly, geometric, repeating pattern Have flat faces that meet at definite angles Crystal Structure 3-D pattern of small units repeating over and over Determined by the type of bond between particles Crystal Systems Cubic- salt Tetragonal Orthorhombic Rhombohedral monoclinic Triclinic Hexagonal- water, quartz Water Example (hexagonal) Water molecules are further apart in solid state than liquid (solid-> less dense) Water is different because of hydrogen bonding. A water molecule is made from one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms, strongly joined to each other with covalent bonds. Water molecules are also attracted to each other by weaker chemical bonds (hydrogen bonds) between the positively-charged hydrogen atoms and the negativelycharged oxygen atoms of neighboring water molecules. As water cools below 4°C, the hydrogen bonds adjust to hold the negatively charged oxygen atoms apart. Amorphous Materials Appears to be a solid but its particles have a disorderly arrangement (no crystal form) Ex: glass no defined melting point, super cooled liquid When shattered breaks at irregular angles, where a crystal when shattered will break along the unit cell Butter- Plastic also super cooled METASTABLE- substance that can occur in long-lasting amorphous form (crystallization will eventually occur but not in your lifetime- millions of years) PLASMA Occurs when matter is heated to a very high temperature > 5000ºC The collisions have so much KE and are so violent that electrons are knocked away from the atoms Plasma is those electrons and the left over positive ions from the collisions Behaves generally like a gas PARTIAL PLASMA- Only a few of the atoms are ionized Neon signs, lightning, fluor. lights Highly ionized plasma= (50000 K100000K) Stars, sun PHASE CHANGE Occurs whenever a physical state of a substance changes (at the melting and boiling pts.) Ex: phase change of water (0°C- melt; 100°C boil) On the graph following, get a leveling off at phase change pts because all of the energy is going into breaking the attractive forces (intermolecular)not raising temperature Physical state depending on bonding structure (ionic, covalent) * Requires energy w Releases energy GAS *MELTING SOLID wFREEZING LIQUID Sublimation = goes directly from solid to gas (dry ice, moth balls, Glade plug in) Deposition= goes from gas to solid frost PHASE DIAGRAMS p.429-430 picture Diff for each substance because each substance has different boiling and freezing point Variables that control the phase of a substance are temp. and pressure Phase diagrams show the relationship between temperature and pressure Triple point = temp. and pressure at which all 3 phases can coexist Critical Point- liquids can no longer exist