matter

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Nature of matter

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Page 1: Matter

Nature of

matter

Page 2: Matter

27.1 Describe the kinetic particle model for solids liquid and gases, and relate the difference in the structure and densities of solids, liquids and

gases to the spacing, ordering and motion of particles

subliming

Liquefying , melting

Freezing, solidtying

Boiling, vaporizingevaporating

Condensing, liquefying

GASLIQUIDSOLIDMolecules held in fixedPattern but vibrating

Molecules packed close Together in a random Fashion. Free to move

Molecules widelySeparated. Move at great speed

Page 3: Matter

27.2 Use the kinetic particle model to explain fluid pressure, freezing, melting, boiling, evaporation, crystallization and the brownian motion.

Freezing

Melting

Boiling

Is a phase change in which a liquid turns into a solid when its temperature is lowered below its freezing point.

is a physical process that results in the phase changeof a substance from a solid to a liquid

is the rapid vaporization of a liquid, which occurs when a liquid is heated to a temperature such that its vapor pressure is above that

of the surroundings

               

Page 4: Matter

Brownian motion

Crystallization

Evaporationis the process whereby atoms or molecules in a liquid state (or solid state if the substance sublimes) gain sufficient energy to enter the gaseous state .

is the slow precipitation of crystals from a solution of a substance. Crystallization can also refer to the solid-liquid separation and purification technique in which mass transfer occurs from the liquid solution to a pure solid crystalline phase.

Is a random movement of microscopic particles suspended in liquids or gases resulting from the impact of molecules of the surrounding

medium

Page 5: Matter

27.3 use the kinetic particle model to explain the thermal expansion of solids and liquids. List some of the problems this phenomenon can

cause and how we solve them, and also list ways in which we make use of this phenomenon .

general increase in the volume of a material as its temperature is increased. It is usually expressed as a fractional change in length or volume per unit temperature change; a linear expansion coefficient is usually employed in describing the expansion of a solid, while a volume expansion coefficient is more useful for a liquid or a gas. If a crystalline solid is isometric (has the same structural configuration throughout), the expansion will be uniform in all dimensions of the crystal. If it is not isometric, there may be different expansion coefficients for different crystallographic directions, and the crystal will change shape as the temperature changes.

Thermal Expansion

Page 6: Matter

27.4 Use the concept of expansivity to solve numerical problems related to thermal expansion .

ΔL=α.L0.ΔT

The change in length L-L0

Linear coefficient

Length Before heating

The expansion after heating

Page 7: Matter

27.5 Explain how the anomalous expansion of water results in ice forming on the surface of water and not at the bottom, and

understand the importance of this to the survival of living things.

The Volume of water decries as the temperature increasefrom 0°C to 4°C . The volume again increase as the temperature

is increase further from 4°C This odd behavior is shown below,

the density of water is thus maximum at 4°C

Page 8: Matter

27.7 Understand and use the term pressure in the contexts of pressure exerted by a solid object and fluid pressure, and derive and use the relationship P=ρgh. Use a manometer to study how pressure increase with depth in water and how

such fluid pressure is directionless.

-Unit of temperature : degrees Celsius (°C), and Kelvin (K) .

-Unit of density: Kg/m³ -Unit of pressure: Pascal N/m²

Volume ÷- Density = massρ= Kg/m³

Area ÷- Pressure= Force ρ= N/m²

Page 9: Matter

27.8 Explain, in terms of the particle model, the hydraulic transmission of a force and know and explain quantitatively some common applications.

Page 10: Matter

27.9 understand why some objects float on water but others do not, and relate up thrust on a floating body to the weight of the fluid displaced .

Principle of Archimedes: It states that when a body is totally or

partially immersed in a fluid it experiences an upthrust equal to the weight of the fluid displaced