Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Solids & Liquids. NM Standards Students know the atoms and molecules in liquids move in a random pattern relative to one another because the intermolecular.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Solids & Liquids. NM Standards Students know the atoms and molecules in liquids move in a random pattern relative to one another because the intermolecular."— Presentation transcript:

1 Solids & Liquids

2 NM Standards Students know the atoms and molecules in liquids move in a random pattern relative to one another because the intermolecular forces are too weak to hold the atoms or molecules in a solid form.

3 Intermolecular Forces  Dipole-dipole attraction  Hydrogen bonds  Dispersion forces Forces of attraction between different molecules rather than bonding forces within the same molecule.

4 Forces and Phases o Substances with very little intermolecular attraction exist as gases o Substances with strong intermolecular attraction exist as liquids o Substances with very strong intermolecular (or ionic) attraction exist as solids

5 Phase Differences Solid Solid – definite volume and shape; particles packed in fixed positions; particles are not free to move Liquid Liquid – definite volume but indefinite shape; particles close together but not in fixed positions; particles are free to move Gas Gas – neither definite volume nor definite shape; particles are at great distances from one another; particles are free to move

6 Three Phases of Matter

7 Types of Solids  Crystalline Solids: highly regular arrangement of their components [table salt (NaCl), pyrite (FeS 2 )].

8 Unit Cell The smallest portion of a crystal lattice that shows the three-dimensional pattern of the entire lattice

9 Types of Solids  Amorphous solids: considerable disorder in their structures (glass and plastic).

10 States of Matter

11 Heating/cooling curve for water

12 Heating curve

13 Cooling Curve

14 Heating and Cooling curves Phase changes occur where the temperature stays flat. After a phase change is complete and all molecules are in the same state the temperature increases to the next phase change.

15 Phase Diagram

16 Critical point: The vapor-liquid critical point denotes the conditions above which distinct liquid and gas phases do not exist.liquid and gas phases do not exist. Triple point: Where all phases coexist in a stable equilibrium Normal freezing and boiling points occur at 1 atm pressure read off the diagram


Download ppt "Solids & Liquids. NM Standards Students know the atoms and molecules in liquids move in a random pattern relative to one another because the intermolecular."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google