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General Science States of Matter + The Gas Laws ‘07-’08
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Three states of Matter Solid Liquid Gas
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Solid Solids have a definite volume and a definite shape. The particles are packed tightly together and stay in one position. The particles vibrate slightly between each other… so they’re not completely motionless.
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Liquid –Liquids have a definite volume but not a definite shape. –They take on the shape of the container –The particles are somewhat packed together and move around.
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Gas –Gases do no definite volume and no definite shape. –The particles are spread out and move around a lot.
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Specific Characteristics of Gases They expand –They spread out to fill the shape and volume of the container Exert pressure –The particles push on the sides of their container
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Specific Characteristics of Gases Low density –They don’t have a lot of mass in a given amount of space –Things sink in the air. If gases had a high density, things wouldn’t sink but float up!
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Diffusion Particles move from areas of high concentration to low concentration Example: an open bottle of perfume
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Four Variables of Gases Amount –The number of individual gas particles Volume –The amount of space the gas takes up
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Four Variables of Gases Temperature –The faster the particles move, the higher the temperature –thermometer Pressure –Measured in atmospheres (atm) –The force the gas exerts on the object it touches
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Boyle’s Law The volume of a certain amount of gas is inversely proportional to the pressure, if the temperature doesn’t change. –If one goes up, the other goes down. Examples - Your lungs use Boyle’s law to function - A potato gun
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Boyle’s Law cartoon
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Charles’ Law The volume of a gas is directly related to the temperature if the pressure remains constant. –If one goes up, the other goes up… Examples - Tires get hotter the more you ride on them - Hot air balloons use Charles law to get bigger!
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