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Agenda: . Homework:. Thermochemistry Heating & Cooling Curves – a review Graphing temperature change Phase Change Diagrams Why are some compounds liquids and gases at room temperatures ?. Characteristics of Solids, Liquids & Gases. Sort the terms into 3 columns: S, L, G
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Agenda: Homework: Thermochemistry • Heating & Cooling Curves – a review • Graphing temperature change • Phase Change Diagrams • Why are some compounds liquids and gases at room temperatures ?
Characteristics of Solids, Liquids & Gases • Sort the terms into 3 columns: S, L, G • (Hint: Look for 3 cards with similar wording and determine which best fits solid, liquid or gas) • Solid Liquid Gas
Most substances, like water, can exist in all three states. An iceberg is made of water in solid form. This glass contains liquid water. A cloud is made of water vapor, a type of gas.
Deposition Boiling / Evaporation Sublimation Condensation Freezing Melting WHAT ARE THE CHANGES OF STATE? Which are endothermic? Which are exothermic? GAS SOLID LIQUID
Changing States (Phase changes) • Where on the picture would we place: • Melting Point? • Boiling Point? • Condensing Point? • Freezing Point? Increase Thermal Energy (Heat up) Solid Liquid Gas Decrease Thermal Energy (Cool off)
States of matter, energy & phase changes Energy level Energy change Phase changes MP/BP Entropy= degree of disorder
Melting point Melting - change from solid to liquid Melting point - SPECIFIC temperature when melting occurs. Each pure substance has a SPECIFIC melting point. Examples: M.P. of Water = 0°C (32°F) M.P. of Nitrogen = -209.9 °C (-345.81998 °F) M.P. of Silver = 961.93 °C (1763.474 °F) M.P. of Carbon = 3500.0 °C (6332.0 °F)
Melting Point Particles of a solid vibrate so fast that they break free from their fixed positions. Increasing Thermal Energy Solid Liquid Melting point
Vaporization Vaporization – change from liquid to gas Vaporization happens when particles in a liquid gain enough energy to form a gas. Increasing Thermal Energy Gas Liquid Boiling point
Two Kinds of Vaporization Evaporation – vaporization that takes place only on the surface of the liquid Boiling – when a liquid changes to a gas BELOW its surface as well as above.
Boiling Point Boiling Point – temperature at which a liquid boils Each pure substance has a SPECIFIC boiling point. Examples: B.P. of Water = 100°C (212°F) B.P. of Nitrogen = -195.79 °C (-320.42 °F) B.P. of Silver = 2162 °C (3924 °F) B.P. of Carbon = 4027 °C (7281 °F)
States of matter, energy & phase changes Energy level Energy change Phase changes MP/BP Entropy= degree of disorder
Heating and Cooling Curves of a Substance Representing MP, BP, CP, FP Heating Cooling Energy (heat) added Energy (heat) released:
Energy requirements for water Three formulas : specific heat Q = mCp∆T heat of fusion Q= mHf heat of vaporization Q= mHv Heating Cooling Energy (heat) added Energy (heat) released:
Energy calculations related heating or cooling specific substances Specific heat (Cp) Latent heat Heat of fusion (Hf) Heat of vaporization (Hv) Use reference tables – values for each pure substance
Heat calculations – 3 formulas • Specific heat = heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of substance 1 °C • Formula: Q = mCp∆T • Specific heat • Specific for each pure substance • Use reference tables
Heat calculations – 3 formulas • Heat of fusion - • Amount of heat added to melt a substance • Amount of heat released to freeze a substance • Formula Q= mHf • Specific for each pure substance • Use reference tables
Heat calculations – 3 formulas • Heat of vaporization- • Amount of heat added to boil a substance • Amount of heat released to condense a substance • Formula Q= mHv • Specific for each pure substance • Use reference tables
Heat energy • In a heat calculation problem, if the problem asks about melting/freezing you would multiply the mass times _____________________. • heat of fusion • heat of vaporization • or specific heat • In a heat calculation problem, if the problem asks about vaporizing/condensing of steam, you would multiply the mass times ________. • Heat of fusion • Heat of vaporization • Specific heat • In a heat calculation problem, if the problem asks about a change in temperature, you would multiply the mass times ___________________ times the change in temperature. • Heat of fusion • Heat of vaporization • Specific heat
Thermochemistry Problems related to water How much heat is required to raise the temperature of 789 g of water from 25oC to 70oC? 2. How much heat is released when 432 g of water cools from 71oC to 18oC? 3. How many joules of heat are given off when 5.9 g of steam cools from 175oC to 125oC?
4. How many joules does it take to melt 35 g of ice at 0oC? 5. How much heat is released when 85 g of steam condense to liquid water? 6. How much heat is necessary to raise the temperature of 25 g of water from 10 oC to 60 oC? 7. How much heat is given off when 50 g of water at 0oC freezes?
How much energy is needed to heat water from a solid to a vapor? Graph the data – using most of the graph paper Time (when heat energy is added) Resulting temperature See Textbook
Review: Heating curve with heat formulas Scroll down http://www.kentchemistry.com/links/Matter/HeatingCurve.htm
What factors impact change? Intermolecular forces Energy Conditions: T, P, V, amount,
Phase diagrams http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLOPaJ8lcr8&feature=endscreen&NR=1
For Water A = B= C= D=
PHET States of Matter http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/states-of-matter
Phase Diagrams. Use the phase diagram for water below to answer the following questions. Review: Interpreting Phase Diagrams What is the state of water at 2 atm and 50C? What phase change will occur if the temperature is lowered from 80C to -5C at 1 atm? You have ice at -10C and 1 atm. What could you do in order cause the ice to sublime?
Interpreting a Phase Diagram of Water at varying pressures Example: 100 atm
1) What is the normal melting point of this substance? ________ 3) What is the normal boiling point of this substance? ________ 4) What is the normal freezing point of this substance? ________ 5) If I had a quantity of this substance at a pressure of 1.25 atm and a temperature of 00 C and heated it until the temperature was 7500 C, what phase transition(s) would occur? At what pressure(s) would they occur? 6) At what temperature do the gas and liquid phases become indistinguishable from each other? ________ 7) If I had a quantity of this substance at a pressure of 0.25 atm and a temperature of -1000 C, what phase change(s) would occur if I increased the pressure to 1.00 atm? At what temperature(s) would they occur?
Vapor pressure http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/liquids/vpress.html Discovery Ed video
Resources for S, L, G http://www.kentchemistry.com/links/Matter/HeatingCurve.htm
How does the chemical composition of a substance impact whether it is a gas, liquid or solid at room temperature?
Factors that Impact State of Matter Type of compound – Ionic, Covalent, Metallic Shape Size Polarity Together impacts intermolecular forces
Shapes of Molecules https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-the-shape-of-a-molecule-george-zaidan-and-charles-morton PHET simulation (?) http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/molecule-shapes
Intermolecular Forces • Impact state of matter for molecules • Covalent Compounds • Forces between molecules • Not between individual atoms Much weaker than the bonds within a molecule (intramolecular bond) • Much weaker than ionic, covalent & metallic bonds
Intermolecular Forces • Three Types • Hydrogen • Dipole – dipole • London Dispersion (Van der Waals) • Based on weak attraction between molecules • partial negative – partial positive
Polarity • http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/molecule-polarity • Use real molecules tab • Molecular dipoles • Electronegativity • Electron density or electrostatic potential • Note: VSEPR – valence shell electron pair repulsion impacts shape
Types of Intermolecular Forces • Strongest intermolecular force • Hydrogen “bond”(~ 10% of a covalent bond) • Molecule must be polar (+ and – sides) • H in one molecule is attracted to the N,O,F of another molecule • Hydrogen Bond - bad choice of words – an attractiveforce , not a bond
Types of Intermolecular Forces • Other intermolecular forces • Dipole-dipole – all polar molecules (weaker) • London dispersion forces – all molecules (weakest)
Dipole-dipole Based on polarity of molecules Found with polar covalent compounds Use with elements other than H attracted to N, O or F
London Dispersion Weakest Temporary polarity Based on movement of the electrons around the nucleus Impacts all molecules – non-polar and polar
Why is water unique? Why does ice float on water? https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-does-ice-float-in-water-george-zaidan-and-charles-morton Hydrogen bonds -