changes in the state of matter phase changes. state of matter change triangle

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Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes

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Page 1: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Changes in the state of matter

Phase Changes

Page 2: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

State of matter change triangle

Page 3: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Change in a material’s states of matter

Is a Physical, not Chemical change

• No Chemical reaction occurs

• Done by adding or subtracting energy to the amount held by each atom

• Also called a phase change

Page 4: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

When state of matter changes

What does not change:

I. The composition of the matter

II. The mass (same mass of liquid water as steam)

Page 5: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

When state of matter changes

What does change:

I. The volume of the matter

II.The amount of energy held within the matter

Page 6: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Phase change Categories

Page 7: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Endothermic change

Occurs when object gains energy from other sources

Added energy result in less restrictive connections between atoms, molecules

Types of endothermic changeI. Melting II. Evaporation or boilingIII.Sublimation

Page 8: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Exothermic change

Occurs when an object loses energy to other objects or the environment

Results in more restrictive connections between atoms

Types of exothermic change:I. FreezingII. CondensationIII.Deposition (sublimation)

Page 9: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Energy transfers associated with water

• Energy released to solidify into ice• Energy absorbed to liquefy into water

• Energy released to condense into liquid• Energy absorbed to vaporize into a gas

Page 10: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Making Smores• Which material

involved with making a smore undergoes a phase change?

• Endo or Exo changes?

Page 11: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Fire• Heat from an outside source must be applied to the

combustable material to make it burn (endothermic action)

• The products(hot air, ash) released from the chemical reaction have an increased amount of heat (endo)

• These products lose their heat as the move away from the source of the reaction (exothermic)

• The surrounding environment (air, the ring of rocks that border the fire, the marshmallow, you) become hotter as energy is transferred to you from the products of the fire

Page 12: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

MORE EXAMPLES OF EXOTHERMIC CHANGES

Page 13: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Condensation

• Convert from gas to liquid

• Dew, the ‘sweating’ of cold bottles on hot summer days

Page 14: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Condensation: molecules have to slow down

Page 15: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

condensation

• Look at the glasses • During the summer

Page 16: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Exothermic Change of State

Page 17: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Can you think of any other examples of condensation?

Page 18: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Freezing

• Convert from liquid to solid

• Making ice cubes

• The cooling of molten lava to rock

Page 19: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Solidification

Page 20: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Freezing?

• What will freeze in this picture in time?

Page 21: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Deposition (sometimes called sublimation as well)

Gas to solid without turning into a liquid

Frost on the ground

Page 22: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Frost on ground

Page 23: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Where else does freezing occur

Page 24: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

MORE EXAMPLES OF ENDOTHERMIC CHANGE

Page 25: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Evaporation, Boiling

• Convert from liquid to gas

• The drying up of lakes and ponds during the summer

• Boiling water in a pan

Page 26: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Evaporation of water at the salt flats: energy is transferred to the water

molecules from the sun

Page 27: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

melting

• Convert from solid to liquid

• Making Iron or Titanium

• a chocolate bar left out on blacktop

Page 28: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Melting

• What loses energy?

• What gains energy?

Page 29: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Melting of Titanium into ingots

Page 30: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Where is the energy coming from to melt or sublimate the ice?

Page 31: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Sublimation

• Direct change from solid to a gas

• Other examples:• Freeze-dried food (coffee)• Ice Cubes getting smaller in freezer• Freezer-burn (too long, improperly wrapped)

Page 32: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Sublimation Dry Ice – solid carbon Dioxide

Page 33: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Sweating

Page 34: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Which phase changes are connected with sweating?

Page 35: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

As you sweat, energy is transferred from your body to the water/oil droplets

Page 36: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Sweating• Exercising increases the energy in your body

• Some of that energy is transferred to the molecules of water and oil that make up your sweat.

• Those water/oil molecule move through pores, evaporate when no longer confined inside the body, taking heat with them

• The transfer of that heat helps your body cool off

Page 37: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Example

• Sweating:

• You lose energy (exothermic)• Sweat gains energy (endothermic)• Energy has been transferred, not created or

destroyed

• You feel cooler• Sweat goes from liquid to gas (boiling, evaporation)

Page 38: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Temperature and phase change

• When substance gains or loses energy, either its temperature or its phase will change, but not both at the same time

• When adding heat to ice, temp will not rise until all ice has melted

Page 39: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Conservation of mass and energy

• In a closed environment:

• Mass can not be created or destroyed

• Energy can not be created or destroyed

• If some atom/molecule gains energy in some form, another must lose energy in some form

Page 40: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Conservation of a system

• The amount of mass or energy in a closed system remains constant, but can be rearranged or transformed

Page 41: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Closed System

• A closed system is a collection of objects that can transfer energy, mass only between themselves

• There is no gain or loss of energy, mass from a closed system

Page 42: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Extras

Page 43: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Refrigerators

• The refrigerant in the coils at the back of the refrigerator take out energy from air inside the refrigerator. Refrigerant evaporates inside coils

• Gas flows to outside of refrigerator, releases heat to environment, refrigerant condenses

Page 44: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle
Page 45: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Air Conditioners, Heaters

Page 46: Changes in the state of matter Phase Changes. State of matter change triangle

Air Conditioner• Hot, humid air is sucked in from the room

• Heat is extracted from air and transferred to water in piping

• The cool dry air is recycled back into room

• Water condenses inside the air conditioner

• A fan takes the heat from the water and blows it away from unit outside of home