Phase Changes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Phase Changes

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Title: Phase Changes Author: Amy Picard Last modified by: apah.fergusonka Created Date: 3/11/2004 12:50:06 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Phase Changes


1
Phase Changes
2
Four Phases of Matter
  • Solid
  • Liquid
  • Gas
  • Plasma
  • Well only talk about the first three today!

3
Solid
  • Molecules Wiggle
  • Definite Volume
  • Definite Shape
  • Low Kinetic Energy
  • (very little motion)

4
Liquid
  • Molecules Slide by each other
  • Definite Volume
  • Indefinite Shape
  • More Kinetic Energy (More motion)

5
Gas
  • Random Motion
  • Indefinite Volume
  • Indefinite Shape
  • Lots of Kinetic Energy (Lots of Motion.)

6
Review of Heat
  • Heat is the transfer of thermal energy of one
    thing to another because of a temperature
    difference.
  • The direction of energy transfer is always from a
    warmer thing to a neighboring cooler thing.
  • This is the 2nd law of thermodynamics

7
Review of Heat Transfer
  • There are three methods of heat transfer
    conduction, convection, and radiation.
  • When a substance absorbs or releases thermal
    energy, two things can happen
  • Increase or decrease in kinetic molecular energy
    (temperature change)
  • Phase change (change in the structure of the
    molecule)

8
Temperature of a Substance as Heat is Added at a
Constant Rate
Temperature
e
d
c
b
a
Heat Being Added
9
Temperature of a Substance as Heat is Added at a
Constant Rate
  1. A solid will experience a temperature increase
  2. Then, at its melting point, the solid will melt.
  3. After melting is complete, a liquid will
    experience an increase in temperature.
  4. Then, at its boiling point, the liquid will boil.
  5. After boiling (or vaporizing) is complete, the
    gas will continue to experience an increase in
    temperature

10
Temperature of a Substance as Heat is Released at
a Constant Rate
11
Temperature of a Substance as Heat is Released at
a Constant Rate
  1. A gas will experience a decrease in temperature.
  2. At its points of condensation (same temperature
    as boiling), the gas will condense and become a
    liquid.
  3. Once condensation is complete, the liquid will
    experience a decrease in temperature.
  4. At its freezing point (same temperature as
    melting), the liquid will freeze.
  5. Once freezing is complete, the solid will
    experience a decrease in temperature.

12
Quick Summary
13
Four BIG ideas
  • When a substance absorbs heat energy, it can
    experience a phase change OR a temperature
    change. And when a substance releases heat
    energy, it can experience a phase change OR a
    temperature change.
  • Phase changes require heat transfers.
  • The substance experiencing the phase change
    always remains at constant temperature.
  • During a temperature change, only one phase of
    matter is present. During a phase change, two
    phases of matter must be present.

14
Melting
  • A change of phase from solid to liquid.
  • Example holding an ice cube in your hand.

15
Vaporization
  • A change of phase from liquid to gas.
  • Two types
  • Boiling
  • Evaporation

16
Boiling
  • A change of phase from liquid to gas that takes
    place beneath the surface of a liquid.
  • The gas that forms below the surface forms
    bubbles and the bubbles are buoyed upwards to the
    surface where they escape.
  • It is important to note that it is the high
    temperature of the water, not the boiling
    process, that cooks food.
  • Boiling is a cooling process since the remaining
    water is cooled. This is why we must continually
    add heat from the stove top.
  • Example Boiling water on the stove

17
Evaporation
  • Change of phase from liquid to gas that takes
    place at the surface of a liquid.
  • Molecules at the surface of a liquid may be
    bumped enough to give them enough kinetic energy
    to break free from the liquid. They can leave the
    surface and fly into the space above the liquid.
    They now comprise a vapor, molecules in the gas
    phase.
  • This is a cooling process. The liquid that is
    left behind is cooler since the molecules that
    broke free had increased kinetic energy.
  • Example Blowing on your soup.
  • Example Stepping out of the shower.

18
Condensation
  • The changing of a gas to a liquid.
  • Vapor molecules collide with the slower moving
    molecules of a cooler surface. The vapor
    molecules give up so much kinetic energy that
    they can't stay in the gaseous phase. They
    condense.
  • The surface gains kinetic energy so condensation
    is a warming process.
  • Example Muggy Boston Days
  • Example A Steam Burn

19
Freezing
  • A change of phase from liquid to solid.
  • When energy is continually withdrawn from a
    liquid, molecular motion slows until the forces
    of attraction between the molecules cause them to
    get closer to one another and to form a solid.
  • Example Freezing ice cubes in the freezer

20
Freezingcont.
  • Impurities in water, such as salt, lower the
    freezing temperature since the foreign molecules
    get in the way of water's crystalline structure.

21
Sublimation
  • A change of phase from solid to gas.
  • Example Dry Ice

22
Deposition
  • A change of phase from gas to solid.
  • Example Snow
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