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Published byDustin Williams Modified over 8 years ago
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By: Martinez Scott, Brandon Weatherspoon
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Has a definite shape and a definite volume. The particles that make up a solid are packed very closely together In many solids, the particles form a regular repeating pattern Solids are made up of crystals such as crystalline solids
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Has a definite volume but no shape of its own With out an container liquids spreads into a wide shallow puddle Particles in a liquid are packed almost as closely as in a solid A liquid has no definite shape because its particles are free to move
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Just like a liquid gas is a fluid Gas can change volume very easily If put into a closed container the particles will either spread apart or be squeezed together as they fill the container As they move gas particles spread apart, filling all the space available A gas has neither definite shape nor volume
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Particles of a liquid have more thermal energy than particles of the same substance in solid form What is the change in state from a solid to a liquid? The answer is melting. If melting occur at specific temperature it is called its melting point The change of state from liquid to solid is called freezing
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The change from a liquid to a gas is called vaporization Vaporization takes place when the particles in a liquid gains enough energy to form a gas Vaporization that takes place only on the surface of a liquid is called evaporation Boiling occurs when a liquid changes to a gas below its surface as well as at the surface
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Sublimation occurs when the surface particles of a solid gains enough energy that they form a gas During sublimation particles of a solid do not pass through the liquid state as they form a gas An example of sublimation occurs with dry ice because it is a common name for solid carbon dioxide
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The first type of law is Boyle’s law. The second type of law is Charles law.
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Boyle’s law is the relationship of the pressure and the volume of a gas. When the pressure goes up the volume goes down
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Charles’s law is the principle of temperature and pressure and volume. When the temperature of a gas increased at constant pressure it’s volume increase.
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Viscosity- a liquid’s resistance to flowing. Surface tension- the result of an inward pull among the molecules of a liquid that brings the molecules on the surface closer together. Melting point- the temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid. Vaporization- the change of state from a liquid to a gas
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Evaporation- the process that occurs when vaporization takes places only on the surface of a liquid.
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