Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a...

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Liquids and Solids

Transcript of Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a...

Page 1: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Liquids and Solids

Page 2: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Characteristics of Liquids and Solids

• What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Page 3: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Property Solid Liquid Gas

Volume

Shape

Relative density

Compressibility

Fluid?

Space between particles

Diffusion rate

Motion of particles(amount and type)

Forces between particles?

Page 4: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Surface Tension

• Surface tension is the tendency for liquid surface to contract.

• Depends on IMFs• Compounds that

interfere with the IMFs and reduce surface tension are called surfactants.

Page 5: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.18 The molecular basis of surface tension.

hydrogen bondingoccurs in three

dimensions

hydrogen bondingoccurs across the surface

and below the surfacethe net vectorfor attractive

forces is downward

Page 6: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.19 Shape of water or mercury meniscus in glass.

adhesive forcesstronger

cohesive forces

H2O

capillarity

Hg

Page 7: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.4 Liquid-gas equilibrium.

Page 8: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.6

Vapor pressure as a function of temperature and intermolecular forces.

Vapor pressure = the pressure of the vapor resulting from evaporation of a liquid (or solid) above a sample of the liquid (or solid) in a closed container

What factors affect the vaporpressure?

Vapor Pressure

Page 9: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Boiling Point

• Temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid = atmospheric pressure

• Normal boiling point vpliquid = 760 mmHg

• condensing point = boiling point

Page 10: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

What if…?

• You are camping at a high altitude of 10,000 ft where the atmospheric pressure is 535 mmHg. If you boil an egg for 10 minutes will it be hard-boiled just right, overdone, or runny? Explain your choice.

Page 11: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Subliming Point

• Temperature at which the vapor pressure of the solid equals atmospheric pressure

• Depositing point = subliming point

Iodine subliming

Page 12: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.12 Dipole moment and boiling point.

Page 13: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.13 Hydrogen bonding and boiling point.

Page 14: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.16 Molecular shape and boiling point.

more points for dispersion

forces to act

fewer points for dispersion

forces to act

Page 15: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Freezing Point

• Temperature at which liquid and solid are in equilibrium

• Not affected by pressure but does depend on IMFs and molar mass

• Melting point = freezing point

Page 16: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.21 The hexagonal structure of ice.

Page 17: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.22 The striking beauty of crystalline solids.

Page 18: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

portion of a 3-D lattice

Figure 12.23 The crystal lattice and the unit cell.

lattice point

unit cell

portion of a 2-D lattice

unit cell

Page 19: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Figure 12.27

Diffraction of x-rays by crystal planes.

Page 20: Liquids and Solids. Characteristics of Liquids and Solids What properties allow you to classify a substance as a solid, liquid, or gas?

Table 12.5 Characteristics of the Major Types of Crystalline Solids

ParticlesInterparticle Forces

Physical Behavior Examples (mp,0C)

Atomic

Molecular

Ionic

Metallic

Network

Group 8A(18)[Ne-249 to Rn-71]

Molecules

Positive & negative ions

Atoms

Atoms

Soft, very low mp, poor thermal & electrical conductors

DispersionAtoms

Dispersion, dipole-dipole, H bonds

Fairly soft, low to moderate mp, poor thermal & electrical conductors

Nonpolar - O2[-219], C4H10[-138], Cl2

[-101], C6H14[-95]

Polar - SO2[-73], CHCl3[-64], HNO3[-42], H2O[0.0]

Covalent bond

Metallic bond

Ion-ion attraction

Very hard, very high mp, usually poor thermal and electrical conductors

Soft to hard, low to very high mp, excellent thermal and electrical conductors, malleable and ductile

Hard & brittle, high mp, good thermal & electrical conductors when molten

NaCl [801]CaF2 [1423]

MgO [2852]

Na [97.8]Zn [420]Fe [1535]