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States of Matter and Intermolecular Forces Chapter 11 11-1 States and State Changes
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Solids Particles have an orderly, fixed arrangement Fixed volumes and shapes
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Liquids Particles move easily past one another (have more energy) Fixed volume, no fixed shape
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Viscosity Ability to Flow Honey is very viscous
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Surface Wetting Adhesion Stick to something else Cohesion Stick to each other
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Capillary Action The movement of water up through a tube – because of adhesion and cohesion
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Surface Tension Cohesive forces Causes liquids to minimize surface area That’s why water drops are round
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Gas Particles are independent Far apart No fixed volume or shape Gases and liquids are fluids
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Changing State Freezing – liquid becomes a solid Melting – solid becomes a liquid Evaporation – liquid becomes gas Condensation – gas becomes liquid Sublimation – solid becomes gas Deposition – gas becomes solid
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Temperature, Energy, and State
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Evaporation High energy particles change to gas Causes the substance to cool
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Boiling Point The temperature at which bubbles of vapor rise to the surface Also depends on atmospheric pressure
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Intermolecular Forces 11-2
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Attraction between Particles Takes energy to separate particles (change state) The stronger the force, the more energy it takes The boiling and melting point is a good measure of the strength of the force Strong force of attraction = high boiling point
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Force of attraction in Ions Higher force of attraction then between molecules High melting points Smaller ions larger force (NaCl > KCl) Larger charge larger force (CaF2 > NaCl)
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Intermolecular Forces The Force of Attraction between molecules
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Types of Intermolecular Forces Dipole-Dipole Forces Hydrogen Bonds London Dispersion Forces All are short range Little effect on gases Many gases have low boiling point (that is why they are gases)
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Polar Molecul e A molecule that has an unequal distribution of charge One end slightly positive, One end slightly negative Caused by difference in electronegativity of the atoms
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Dipole-Dipole Forces Interaction between polar molecules Positive end of one molecule attracts the negative end of another
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Dipole-Dipole Forces and Boiling Point The more polar the molecules, the stronger the force between them, the higher the boiling point
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Hydrogen Bonds When a hydrogen atom of one molecule is attracted to an atom of a different molecule Water
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Hydrogen Bonds Can create a larger difference in electronegativity Also hydrogen is small and has only 1 electron Which increases the bond strength Which increases the boiling point
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Hydrogen Bonds and Water Water has unique properties, because of hydrogen bonds Can form multiple hydrogen bonds Strong intermolecular forces
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Solid water is less dense than liquid water Ice Floats Ponds freeze from top down Expanding ice cracks rocks and concrete
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London Dispersion Forces The force that hold non- polar molecules together The weakest of the intermolecular forces Explains why some non- polar molecules are not gases
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London Dispersion Forces Nonpolar molecules can become temporary dipoles (electrons move from side to side) Causes molecules to attract each other
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London Dispersion Forces Nearby molecules always attract The more electrons, the stronger the force
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Energy of State Changes 11-3
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Enthalpy The total energy of a system
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Entropy A measure of system’s disorder
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Enthalpy of Fusion The energy added during melting or removed during freezing AKA the heat of fusion
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Entropy of Fusion The increase of entropy when a solid melts
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Enthalpy of Vaporization The energy added during evaporation
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Entropy of Vaporization The increase of entropy when a liquid evaporates Much larger than entropy of fusion
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The molar enthalpy of fusion The heat energy needed to melt 1 mol of a substance For water it is 6.01 kJ/mol
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The molar enthalpy of vaporization The heat energy needed to evaporate 1 mol of a substance For water it is 40.67 kJ/mol
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Phase Equilibrium 11-4
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System A set of components that are being studied
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Phase A region that has the same composition and properties throughout Lava lamp – Two phases of liquid - Different chemical compositions
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Phase Water – Two phases, same chemical composition - Different States
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Dynamic Equilibrium The net amount of substance in a given phase stays the same Eg. The rate of evaporation equals the rate of condensation Which of these?
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Vapor Pressure The pressure exerted by a gas in equilibrium with a liquid Boiling point – The temp at which vapor pressure equals the external pressure
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As temperature increases, vapor pressure increases Normal Boiling Point – when vapor pressure equals the atmospheric pressure
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Phase Diagrams A graph of the relationship between the state of a substance and its temperature and pressure
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Phase Diagrams 3 lines Vapor pressure for liquid-gas equilibrium A-B Liquid-solid equilibrium A-D Solid gas equilibrium A-C
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Triple Point The temperature and pressure at which all three states are in equilibrium
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Critical Point The temperature and pressure at which the gas and liquid states become identical Called a supercritical fluid
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Supercritical Fluid
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