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Foundations of Chemistry Matter Chapter 7 Lesson 3 Physical Changes
Mr. Nigh Science 7
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Physical Changes A Physical change is a change in any physical property of a substance, not in the substance itself. Stretching a rubber band is a physical change. Changing the state of matter of a substance (water to ice) is a physical change 2
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A square of clay that has been molded
may have different physical properties such as shape and volume, but it is still clay.
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Physical changes of wool
Wool is sheared from sheep Wool fibers are spun into yarn The yarn is dyed a special color. The yarn is knitted into a jacket. 4
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The wool has gone through many physical changes, but is still the same substance
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Adding Thermal Energy When Thermal energy is added to a substance, the particles move faster and faster. Substances may change their state of matter
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REMEMBER: particles are always in motion, even in solids
REMEMBER: particles are always in motion, even in solids. Because the particles in a solid are bound together, they do not move from place to place-they vibrate As a solid heats up, the particles vibrate faster until they break loose and slide past each other-in other words turn into a liquid. 7
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Evaporation is the process by which a liquid becomes a gas
It usually occurs at the surface of a liquid The fastest moving particles at the surface can break away from the liquid and escape to become gas particles 8
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Sublimation Under certain conditions, solids can lose particles through a process similar to evaporation. When solids change directly to a gas, it is known as sublimation. Dry ice or frozen carbon dioxide sublimates in normal atmospheric conditions 9
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Removing Thermal Energy
When thermal energy is removed from a gas, such as water vapor, particles in the gas move more slowly and the temperature decreases
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Condensation is the process by
which a gas changes its state to become a liquid When you cool a gas it loses energy. As the particles move more slowly, the attractions among them cause water droplets to form 11
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Freezing is the process by which a liquid becomes a solid
A frozen substance does not have to have an extremely cold temperature, some substances are frozen at room temperatures (ie. candles, pop cans) 12
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The freezing point of a substance is the same as the melting point
The temperature at which a specific liquid becomes a solid is its freezing point. The freezing point of a substance is the same as the melting point At temperatures below this point the substance is a solid, above this point the substance is a liquid. 13
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Deposition Deposition is the change from a gas directly into a solid
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Dissolving If you add salt to a beaker of water and it disappears, the substance is dissolving
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Conservation of Mass The particles of matter that are present before a physical change are the same as those present after a physical change Thus, the total mass before and after physical change is identical
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