The Nature of Solids & Changes of State Miss K. Marshall.

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The Nature of Solids & Changes of State Miss K. Marshall

Transcript of The Nature of Solids & Changes of State Miss K. Marshall.

Page 1: The Nature of Solids & Changes of State Miss K. Marshall.

The Nature of Solids & Changes of StateMiss K. Marshall

Page 2: The Nature of Solids & Changes of State Miss K. Marshall.

Connecting to your world

In 1985, a new form of carbon discovered buckyball Carbon buckminsterfullerene

What will we learn in this section?

How the arrangement of particles in solids determines the general properties of solids.

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A Model for Solids

The general properties of solids reflect the orderly arrangement of their particles and the fixed locations of their particles

Particles are packed tightly together

dense

Not easily compressed

Particles vibrate in fixed locations

Do not flow

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A Model for Solids (continued)

As temperature what happens to kinetic energy?

What is the effect on the particles of a solid?

Organization eventually breaks down , solid will melt

Melting point (mp)

the temperature at which a solid changes into a liquid

Overcome intermolecular forces

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Crystal Structure and Unit Cells

Most solid substances are crystalline

crystal

a substance in which the particles are arranged in an orderly, repeating, three-dimensional pattern called a crystal lattice

****The shape of a crystal reflects the arrangement of the particles within the solid.

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Crystal Structure and Unit Cells

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Crystal Structure

Ionic solids have high melting points because strong forces keep them together

Molecular solids have low melting points because the forces that keep them together are weak

Not all solids melt some decompose Examples?

Cane sugar, wood

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Crystal Systems

Crystal has sides (faces)

Angles at which the faces of a crystal intersect are always the same for a given substance and are characteristic of that substance

Unit cell

The smallest group of particles within a crystal that retains the geometric shape of the crystal

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Allotropes

Some solid substances can exist in more than one form◦ Known as allotropes: two or more different molecular forms

of the same element in the same physical state Example: carbon

◦ Graphite (pencils)◦ Diamond

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Not all solids are in crystalline form; some are amorphous

Lacks an ordered internal structure

Example: rubber, plastic, asphalt, glass

glass

A transparent fusion product of inorganic substances that have cooled to a rigid state without crystallizing

Do not melt at a definite temperature – gradually softens

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Changes of State

Connecting to Your World

Water

Weather patterns

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Sublimation

Sublimation

The change of a substance from a solid to a vapor without passing through the liquid state

****sublimation occurs in solids with vapor pressures that exceed atmospheric pressure at or near room temperature.

Solid carbon dioxide (dry ice)

Solid air fresheners

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Phase Diagrams

Phase Diagram

A single graph that represents the relationships among the solid, liquid, and vapor states (or phases) of a substance in a sealed container

Pressure (y-axis); temperature (x-axis)

****The conditions of pressure and temperature at which two phases exist in equilibrium are indicated on a phase diagram by a line separating the phases

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Triple point – describes the only set of conditions at which all three phases can exist in equilibrium with one another