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Molecular Motion. Chapter 3. Matter and Energy. Matter- anything that has mass and volume 4 states : solids, liquids, gases, plasma Energy- ability to do work: Potential Kinetic. Kinetic Molecular Theory. Kinetic Molecular Theory (KMT):
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Molecular Motion Chapter 3
Matter and Energy Matter- anything that has mass and volume • 4 states: solids, liquids, gases, plasma Energy- ability to do work: • Potential • Kinetic
Kinetic Molecular Theory Kinetic Molecular Theory (KMT): • All matter is made of constantly movingparticles (atoms, molecules) • All particles have kinetic energy (KE)
Temperature and Kinetic Energy Temperature • measure of averagekinetic energy • the more KE an object has, the higher its temperature Thermal energy= total KE; depends on: • particle speed- faster particles have moreKE • number of particles- more particles have greaterthermal energy
Energy and Solids Solids • low KE - particles vibrate but can’t move around • definite shape, volume: *crystalline - repeating geometric pattern *amorphous - no pattern (e.g. glass, wax)
Energy and Liquids Liquids • higher KE - particles can move, but are still close together • indefinite shape, not volume • flows-fluid
Energy and Gases Gases • high KE – particles move freely • indefinite shapeandvolume • flows- fluid
Energy and Plasma Plasma • very high KE- particles collide with enough energy to ionize (break into charged particles) • lacksdefinite shape or volume • can conduct electric current (unlike gases) • mostcommon state of matter
Changes of States Requiring Energy (Remember: heated particles move faster; cool particles move slower • Melting point- solid to liquid • Evaporation- liquid to gas • Sublimation- solids to gas
Changes of State Releasing Energy • Condensation- gas to liquid • Freezing- liquid to solid • Temperature is constant during all changes in state of matter (ex: If energy is added to ice, the temperature of ice will not rise until all the ice has melted)
Conservation of Matter and Energy • Neither mass nor energy can be created or destroyed during changes of state
Pressure and Fluids • Fluids: (liquids, gases) exert pressure evenly in all directions • Pressure: amount of force exerted on a given surface Pressure = force area • Pascal (Pa): unit of pressure; 1N/m²
Buoyant Force • Buoyant force: the ability of a fluid to exert an upward force on an object immersed in it (forces pushing up > forces pushing down) * bouyant force > weight object rises ** bouyant force < weight object sinks ***bouyant force = weight object floats
Buoyancy and Density • Density: = mass ÷ volume; D= m v • An object with D less than 1 g/cm³ will float
Archimedes Principle • Archimedes principle: the bouyant force on an object in a fluid is equal to the weight of fluid displaced by the object
Pascal’s Principle • Pascal’s Principle: a change in pressure at any point in an enclosed fluid will be transmitted equally to all parts of the fluid F₁ = F₂ A₁ A₂
Pascal’s Principle • Hydraulic devices: use liquid to transmit pressure from one point to another ex: hydraulic breaks in cars, movement in starfish
Pascal’s Principle Practice • A car weighing 1000 N sits on a 250 m2 platform. What force is needed on the 10 m2 plunger to keep the car from sinking? Given: Platform: F= 1000 A= 250m² Plunger: F= ? A= 10m² Remember:F₁ = F₂A₁ A₂ Solve: 1000 N= F₂ 250m² 10m² (1000N)(10m²)=(250m²)F₂ F₂ = 40N
Bernoulli’s Principle • Bernoulli’s Principle: as the velocity of a fluid increases, the pressure exerted by the fluid decreases
Bernoulli’s Principle • Viscosity: a fluid’s resistance to flow (usually, the stronger the attraction between particles in a liquid, the slower it flows)
Bernoulli’s Principle • VenturiEffect: fluids flow faster through narrow spaces causing reduced pressure