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CONDENSED STATES OF MATTER Chapter 13. States of Matter: ______ - composed of particles packed closely together with little space between them. Solids.

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Presentation on theme: "CONDENSED STATES OF MATTER Chapter 13. States of Matter: ______ - composed of particles packed closely together with little space between them. Solids."— Presentation transcript:

1 CONDENSED STATES OF MATTER Chapter 13

2 States of Matter: ______ - composed of particles packed closely together with little space between them. Solids maintain a _______ ____. ______ - any substance that flows. (A fluid) - particles are free to slide past one another and continual change their positions. Particles are in ______ ______ ______. ______ - are fluids composed of particles in ______ ______ ______. Gases are not touching most of the time.

3 Kinetic-Molecular Description of Liquids & Solids Solids & liquids are Solids & liquids are ______ ______  atoms, ions, molecules are close to one another  highly incompressible Liquids & gases are Liquids & gases are ______  easily flow in liquids & solids are strong ______ ______ ______ in liquids & solids are strong

4  ______ liquids diffuse into one another  they are ______ in each other  for example: water/alcohol gasoline/motor oil  ______ liquids do not diffuse into each other  they are ______ in each other  for example: water/oil water/cyclohexane

5 Periodic Table Reminders ______ ______ - called groups or families. Elements in a group have similar chemical and physical properties ______ ______ - called periods, elements within a period have properties that change progressively across the table

6 Intermolecular forces, I.F. depend on the shape of the molecules and polarity (dipole moments), Lewis structures and electronegativity Table 13-1 Characteristics of solids, liquids, and gases Ex. Sulfur hexafluoride Ex. water

7 ______ ______ __ ______ attractions are the strongest. makes up ionic bonding tend to be crystalline solids (hard, but brittle) very high melting points Na + Cl - Na + Cl - Na + Cl - Cl - Na + Cl - Na + Cl - Na + Na + Cl - Na + Cl - Na + Cl -  ion-ion attractions

8 ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ attractions (fairly strong) happens with polar molecules b/c they have permanent dipole moments H—Cl δ + δ -

9 ______ ______ ______ _ ______ ______ – a special dipole attraction, stronger than normal dipole-dipole attractions - very strong attraction ~ 2 conditions: must have a ______ bonded to a H and at least one lone pair of electrons on N, O, F δ + δ - H..l H—N—H δ - :N –H δ + δ + l δ + l H H δ + δ +

10 ______ ______ ______ London dispersion forces (the weakest), also called van der Waals attractions ______ ______ occurs in nonpolar molecules temporary dipole caused by interaction with another molecule boil and melt very easily δ + δ - F—F δ - δ +

11 Properties of liquids Properties of liquids at constant temperature ~ no definite ______ ~ definite ______ ~ have surface tension, diffuse, medium density, viscosity, evaporation, capillary action, and vapor pressure. ______ of each depends on I.F.

12 1. ______ ______ Surface Tension - measure of the ______ ______ that occur at the surface of a liquid molecules at surface of a liquid are only attracted in a down direction. Denser on top  At surface, molecules are attracted downward, thus liquid is denser on top  water bugs

13 2. Viscosity – ______ – how easily it flows ~ stronger I.F. ______ ______ the liquid is ~ geometry of molecule affects viscosity (more complex shapes = more viscous) ~ very long chains – more viscous b/c longer chains get tangled C—C—C—C—C—C—C—C —C—C—C—C more viscousless viscous

14 3. ______ ______ – tendency of a liquid to be ______ or ______ by a very narrow tube - Stronger I.F. more cohesion ~ when a molecule has attraction for itself, it’s called ______ ~ when a molecule has attraction for other molecules, it is ______  capillary rise implies adhesive > cohesive (water)  capillary fall implies cohesive > adhesive (mercury)

15 4. _____ _ – when a liquid changes to the vapor phase at a temp. that is less than it’s boiling point. Why? If the molecule can gain enough speed, they break through the liquid and go into the atmosphere

16 5. ______ ___ – the pressure of a gas that exists over its solid or liquid state. High I.F. = low P vap Does not depend on how much liquid/solid you have. P vap depends on the temp. and type of substance. You have vapor pressure as long as there is evaporation of a liquid. Higher Temperature = Higher vapor pressure Boiling occurs when the P vap of liquid = P atm

17 The Liquid State Vapor Pressure (High I.F. = low P vapor )

18 ______ ______ ______ ~ All liquids have different boiling points: based on I.F. Higher I.F., higher the normal boiling point. ~ can separate liquids on the basis of their b.p. (distillation) CH 3 OH has a lower boiling point than C 2 H 5 OH, so it changes to a gas first.

19 ______ – show the phase of matter at a variety of P and T. (pg 507) ~ Substances can be almost any phase, given the right P and T. H 2 o is less dense in solid state (ice has lots of space in it), water has a negative slope between the solid & liquid on the phase diagram. Water is densest at 4 o C.

20 ______ ______ ______ _____ q = mcΔT q = heat m = mass c = specific heat ΔT = change in temp. specific heat is the amount of energy needed to raise 1 g of a substance 1 o C If c is big, it’s hard to heat up or cool down. If less than one, easy to heat up or cool down. During a phase change, the temp. stays the same. Still heating/cooling, but no temp. change due to the breaking down or forming of I.F.

21 ______ s  ℓ melting (or fusion) ℓ  s freezing ℓ  g boiling g  ℓ condensation (liquefaction if forced to occur by pressure) s  g sublimation g  s deposition

22 melt or evaporating (boiling) + q freeze or condensing -q

23 q = mH f enthalpy of fusion q = mH v enthalpy of vaporization q = mH s enthalpy of sublimation(A-12) q is + if substance is melting or evaporating q is – if substance is freezing or condensing Ex. How much heat is required to raise the temp. of 50.0 g of ice at –12.0 o C to 120.0 o C

24 Trends in boiling points of Liquids GasMWBP( o C) The boiling point increases in response to molecular size

25

26 In the Liquid State HF has the highest B.P. b/c of Hydrogen bonding. The rest increases in response to molecular size.

27 In the Liquid State Water has the highest B.P. because of Hydrogen bonding. The rest increases b/c of increase in molecular size.

28 Various boiling points Arrange the following substances in order of increasing boiling points. C 2 H 6, NH 3, Ar, NaCl, AsH 3

29 29 Amorphous & Crystalline Solids Amorphous solids ______ have a well ordered structure. Particles are irregularly arranged so IF vary in strength within a sample Ex. Crystalline solids have well defined structures that consist of extended array of repeating units. Have defined IF. give X-ray difraction patterns ~ see Bragg equation in book Ex.

30 30 Structure of Crystals unit cell - smallest repeating unit of a crystal Ex. bricks are repeating units for buildings 7 basic crystal systems  We do not need to learn these 7 now – just an FYI for your future…

31 Types of Solids 4 Types of Solids: Ionic, Metallic, Molecular, Covalent ______ : positive and negative ions arranged in a specific structure. Electrostatic attractions are strong. ______ : metals where each valence electron is thought to belong to the entire structure. So metals are seen as a positive nuclei with a sea of electrons. The mobility of electrons helps explain the electrical conductivity of metals.

32 ______ ______ : are solids made up of molecules that are next to each other in unit cells. The attractive forces between individual molecules are relatively weak. They are volatile and insulators. Simple covalent compounds usually form molecular solids ______ ______ : Network solids or giant molecules – individual atoms are covalently bonded to other atoms and those atoms are bonded to other atoms, etc. This makes covalent solids very hard with very high melting points. Most are nonconductors.

33 33 Examples of Bonding in Solids Ionic Solids  ions occupy the unit cell  Examples:

34 34 Examples of Bonding in Solids Metallic Solids  positively charged nuclei surrounded by a sea of electrons  positive ions occupy lattice positions  Examples:

35 35 Examples of Bonding in Solids Molecular Solids  molecules occupy unit cells  low melting points,volatile & insulators  Examples:

36 36 Examples of Bonding in Solids Covalent Solids  atoms that are covalently bonded to one another  Examples:

37 CompoundMelting Point ( o C) LiF842 LiCl614 LiBr547 LiI450 CaF21360 CaCl2772 CaBr2730 CaI2740 Bonding in Solids - Variations in Melting Points Ionic Solids Melt at fairly high temps b/c the attraction between ions are much stronger than in molecular solids but weaker than in covalent solids. Attractive forces increase as charges on ions increase & their radii decrease.

38 Melting points vary widely b/c there are large variations in the strengths of metallic bonding. Most metals have fairly high melting points but Mercury is a liquid at room temp. MetalMelting Point ( o C) Na98 Pb328 Al660 Cu1083 Fe1535 W3410 Bonding in Solids - Variations in Melting Points Metallic Solids

39 Have low melting points (most < 300 o C ) because the attractive forces between the molecules are rather weak. CompoundMelting Point ( o C) ice 0 ammonia-77.7 benzene, C6H6 5.5 napthalene, C10H8 80.6 benzoic acid, C6H5CO2H122.4 Bonding in Solids - Variations in Melting Points Molecular Solids

40 Melt at high temps (most > 1500 o C ) because the attractive forces between the individual particles are very strong. SubstanceMelting Point ( o C) sand, SiO2 1713 carborundum, SiC~2700 diamond>3550 graphite3652-3697 Bonding in Solids - Variations in Melting Points Covalent Solids

41 Brief summary Intermolecular attractions from strongest to weakest  Ion-Ion: ionic compounds (metal/nonmetal)  Hydrogen bonding: H attached to a N, O, or F and lone pair of e - on the central atom  Dipole – Dipole: polar compounds  London Dispersion Forces (induced dipole): all compounds exhibit this, but it is most important with non-polar compounds.

42 Effects of intermolecular attractions The compound that has the highest boiling pt, melting pt, and heat of vaporization corresponds to the compound with the strongest I.F. The highest vapor pressure corresponds to the lowest intermolecular attractions. If two compounds are nonpolar, the one with the greatest molecular mass has the greater London Forces. If two compounds are ionic, the one with the greatest charge ions has the greater I.F. If same charge, the smallest ions have the greatest I.F.

43 For many years, the world’s record for flying gliders was 60,000 ft. It was set by a Texan who flew into an updraft in front of an approaching storm. The pilot had to fly out of the updraft and land, not because he was our of air (there was still plenty of air in his compressed air bottle) but because he was not wearing a pressurized suit. What would have happened to the pilot’s blood if he had continued to fly higher?


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