2.4 form 3 melting and boiling
TRANSCRIPT
MELTING AND BOILING
MELTING When ice is heated, it melts.
Ice melts at 0oC.
The heat applied is used to break the forces of attraction between molecules.
As the ice melts, temperature remains constant.
The heat applied to melt a substance is called Latent Heat.
Latent heat means ‘hidden’ heat.
Since there is no change in temperature, the heat applied is hidden.
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
M.P. of Nitrogen = -209.9 °C
M.P. of Silver = 961.93 °C
M.P. of Carbon = 3500.0 °C
Melting Point Particles of a solid vibrate so fast that they break free
from their fixed positions.
Solid Liquid
Increasing Thermal Energy
Melting point
Vaporization Vaporization – change from liquid to gas
Vaporization happens when particles in a liquid gain enough energy to form a gas.
GasLiquid
Increasing Thermal Energy
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
B.P. of Nitrogen = -195.79 °C
B.P. of Silver = 2162 °C
B.P. of Carbon = 4027 °C
EVAPORATION BOILING-takes place at all temperatures - takes place at a constant temperature
(boiling point)
-takes place at a slow rate - takes place at a faster rate
-particles move slowly - particles move rapidly
-no bubbles seen - bubbles are formed deep in the liquid
- - bubbles expand, rise, burst and releaselarge amounts of vapour
-takes place on the surface of the liquid - takes place throughout the liquid
-depends on temperature, surface area and - depends on the rate of heat supplystate of air above the surface
- Brings about cooling - no cooling
Boiling Point and Melting Point
-150
-100
-50
0
50
100
150
200
Te
mp
era
ture
time
WATER – H20
Melting point
Boiling point
solid
liquid
gas
Melting and boiling occur at constant temperatures. The heat supplied is hidden ‘latent’. Bonds between molecules are weakened in melting and broken boiling. More energy is required for boiling than melting.