Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

26
Kinetic Energy, Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Temperature, Phase Changes Changes Chapter 13 Concepts Chapter 13 Concepts

description

Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes. Chapter 13 Concepts. Kinetic Energy. particles have a wide range of K.E. use the average kinetic energy of all particles substances in different states of matter can have the same average K.E. table salt, water, helium at room temperature - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Page 1: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase ChangesPhase Changes

Chapter 13 ConceptsChapter 13 Concepts

Page 2: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Kinetic Energy• particles have a wide range of K.E.• use the average kinetic energy of all

particles• substances in different states of matter

can have the same average K.E.– table salt, water, helium at room

temperature• the Kelvin temp. of a substance is directly

proportional to the average K.E. of the particles in a substance– 200 K has twice as much K.E. as 100 K

Page 3: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 4: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Temperature vs. Heat• temperature is a

measure of the average kinetic energy in a system

• heat is the energy transfer between two systems

Page 5: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 6: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Absolute Zero

• particles would stop moving at a very low temperature

• zero Kelvin is the temperature where motion of particles theoreticaly ceases

• closest we have come is 0.5 x 10 –9 K

Page 7: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 8: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Phase Changes

Page 9: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

LIQUID

GAS SOLID

meltingvaporization**evaporation*boiling

sublimation

condensationfreezing

or solidification

= taking away heat (cooling down)= adding heat (heating up)

Page 10: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Vapor Pressure

• measure of the force exerted by a gas above a liquid

• dynamic equilibrium is reached when condensation equals evaporation

Page 11: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

• an increase in temperature increases the vapor pressure of the liquid

• molecules have increased KE– more molecules will

“escape”

Page 12: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 13: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

EvaporationEvaporation• a type of vaporization –

the conversion of a liquid to a gas or vapor

• evaporation is vaporization at the surface

• only molecules with a certain amount of KE can escape from the surface

Page 14: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

• particles left behind have a lower KE

• thus, evaporation is a “cooling process”

• think of what happens when you sweat

Page 15: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Boiling Point• a type of vaporization

where the vapor pressure of liquid is equal (to the external pressure on the liquid (atmospheric pressure)

• when a liquid is heated to a temperature at which particles throughout the liquid have enough KE to vaporize

Page 16: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 17: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Boiling point and pressure• BP will change due

to vapor pressure• different elevations

will result in different BP

• normal BP is at STP (101.3 kPa)

Why must you cook things longer at higher elevations?

Page 18: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

MeltingMelting Point Point

• temperature at which a solid changes into a liquid

• disruptive vibrations overcome attractive forces holding particles together

Page 19: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Sublimation• change from solid

directly to liquid• when solid’s vapor

pressure exceeds atmospheric pressure at room temperature

• example: iodine, dry ice, air fresheners, freeze dried coffee

Page 20: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Condensation

• conversion of a gas to a liquid

• molecules with lower KE go back into liquid form

Page 21: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Freezing or Solidification

• process in which a liquid turns into a solid when cold enough

• most liquids freeze by crystallization• for most liquids, the freezing point and

melting point are the same temperature

Page 22: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 23: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Phase Diagrams

• provides conditions of pressure and temperature at which a substance can exist as a solid, liquid, and vapor

• the triple point is where all three phases exist at once

Page 24: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes
Page 25: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes

Review of ConceptsReview of Concepts

Page 26: Kinetic Energy, Temperature, Phase Changes