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Published byKenneth Edwards Modified over 9 years ago
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2.5a: Heating Curves SPS7. Students will relate transformations and flow of energy within a system. b. Investigate molecular motion as it relates to thermal energy changes in terms of conduction, convection, and radiation. d. Explain the flow of energy in phase changes through the use of a phase diagram.
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Part I: Heating Curve Basics What happens to the temperature of a block of ice when you put a Bunsen burner underneath it? You might think that the temperature goes up smoothly, but that's not what happens. The graph of temperature vs. time is called a heating curve. Let's look at the heating curve for water :
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Notice that, in general, the temperature goes up the longer the heating continues. However, there are two horizontal flat parts to the graph. These happen when there is a change of phase. These plateaus are also called phase changes.
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Notice that, in general, the temperature goes up the longer the heating continues. However, there are two horizontal flat parts to the graph. These happen when there is a change of phase. These plateaus are also called phase changes. The first change of state is melting (changing from a solid to a liquid). The temperature stays the same while a substance melts. For water, this temperature is 0°C because the melting point for water is 0°C. The second change of state is boiling (changing from a liquid to a gas).
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The temperature stays the same while a substance boils. For water, this temperature is 100°C because the boiling point for water is 100°C. Different substances have different melting points and boiling points, but the shapes of their heating curves are very similar.
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For example, this is the heating curve for iron, a metal that melts at 1538°C and boils at 2861°C. Part II: Reading the Heating Curve (Practice) Take a close look at this generic heat curve. The letters on the graph represent where changes occur to the temperature of the substance over time.
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Part II: Reading the Heating Curve (Practice) Take a close look at this generic heating curve. The letters on the graph represent where changes occur to the temperature of the substance over time. Q1 : Identify the process that takes place during line segment DE of the heating curve. Q2 : Identify a line segment in which the avg. kinetic energy is increasing. Q3 : What is happening to the average kinetic energy of the particles during segment BC ? A1 : Boiling (phase change from L G). NOT evaporation (that occurs below the boiling point). A2 : Avg. KE = temp, so AB, CD, or EF A3: Avg. KE = temp, so it remains the same.
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