Chemistry 101: Gases, Liquids, and Solids
This content defines a phase as a distinct physical form of matter and outlines the three main phases: solid, liquid, and gas. It explains how temperature and pressure drive phase changes and names the common transitions between phases, such as fusion, freezing, condensation, and vaporization.
Define and give the three examples of:
a phase
A phase is a physically distinct form of a substance that can be separated from another form. Generally phase is used interchangeably with “state of matter”.
Solid, liquid, and gas are the three phases of matter that most chemistry courses, as well as the AP Chemistry exam, will test.
Key Terms
Define and give the three examples of:
a phase
A phase is a physically distinct form of a substance that can be separated from another form. Generally...
Which two state functions can be used to actively change the phase of a substance?
Temperature (Heat, Enthalpy) can be added or removed. In general, an increase in temperature drives the...
What name is associated with a phase change from
solid to liquid?
liquid to solid?
solid⇒liquid is fusion (melting)
liquid⇒solid is freezing (solidificat...
What name is associated with a phase change from
gas to liquid?
liquid to gas?
gas⇒liquid is condensation
liquid⇒gas is vaporization (boiling)
What name is associated with a phase change from
gas to solid?
solid to gas?
gas⇒solid is deposition
solid⇒gas is sublimation
What phase is the substance in sections A, B, and C in the below diagram?
A represents the Solid phase region.
B represents the Liquid phase reg...
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| Term | Definition |
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Define and give the three examples of: a phase | A phase is a physically distinct form of a substance that can be separated from another form. Generally phase is used interchangeably with “state of matter”. Solid, liquid, and gas are the three phases of matter that most chemistry courses, as well as the AP Chemistry exam, will test. |
Which two state functions can be used to actively change the phase of a substance? | Temperature (Heat, Enthalpy) can be added or removed. In general, an increase in temperature drives the phase change solid⇒liquid⇒gas. Pressure (Volume) can be added or removed. In general, an increase in Pressure (or decrease in Volume) drives the phase change gas⇒liquid⇒solid. |
What name is associated with a phase change from
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What name is associated with a phase change from
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What name is associated with a phase change from
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What phase is the substance in sections A, B, and C in the below diagram? |
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What phase conversions are being shown with arrows A and B? |
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What phase conversions are being shown with arrows A and B? |
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What phase conversions are being shown with arrows A and B? |
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What points are arrows A and B pointing to? |
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Explain the significance of the critical point. | The critical temperature and critical pressure combine to be the critical point:
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Explain the significance of the triple point. | The triple point is the point at which a substance can exist in equilibrium in all three states (solid, liquid, and gas). This means that instantaneously, a substance at its triple point can interconvert between any phase. |
How does the phase diagram of water differ from the one below? | Water has a slightly negative sloped Solid/Liquid boundary. |
Different materials require different applications of heat in order to transition into a new phase. Why is this? | The difference is due to intermolecular forces. The attraction of molecules to each other determines at which temperature mixtures will have phase changes, and subsequently the amount of heat necessary to make that transition. |
What types of intermolecular forces exist? | From strongest (1) to weakest (4), they are:
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Define: dipole forces | Dipole forces occur when a molecule with polar bonds has the geometry to become overall polar. This results in partially positive and negative charges, and these opposite charges attract other charged molecules in the mixture. |
Define: hydrogen bonds | Hydrogen bonds are a product of H being covalently bonded to either O, N, or F. This is an extreme form of the dipole-dipole force. The high electronegativity difference between these atoms and hydrogen creates strong dipoles, which consequently result in the strongest dipole-dipole interactions between molecules. |
Define: London Dispersion forces | Dispersion forces (also called Van der Waals forces) are an instantaneous polarization of molecules that would otherwise be non-polar. This process is also referred to as an induced dipole because there is an instantaneous reorganization of the electron cloud leading to partial polarization. The more valence electrons present in either a molecule or in a mixture, the more possible repulsion of electron clouds, and the more induced dipoles. |
Define: ionic forces | Ionic forces occur when two oppositely charged ions (cations and anions) attract each other. In general, ions attract to a polar molecule first, then attract each other - hence this is often called Ion-Dipole force. (Two Ions attracting each other would otherwise prefer to Ionic Bond, which is an intramolecular force, not an intermolecular force.) |
Describe how the boiling point of a substance changes depending on the strength of the intermolecular forces present? | The stronger the intermolecular forces present, the higher the boiling point. This is due to the molecules being more tightly attracted to each other is the liquid phase. In order of highest (1) to lowest (4) boiling points: |
List forces from strongest to weakest: Dipole-Dipole |
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Define: Hv | Hv is the heat of vaporization. It represents the energy necessary to convert a liquid to a gas. |
Define: Hf | Hf stands for the heat of fusion. This is the amount of energy that is necessary to convert a solid to a liquid. |
What processes are associated with the plateaus A and B, for the general heating curve below? |
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Why are the slopes zero for plateaus A and B? | Zero slope means no temperature change. This occurs at these times because any heat input is dedicated to breaking bonds between molecules, instead of increasing temperature. Ex: during the vaporization of water, heat is needed to break the hydrogen bonds between liquid water molecules and convert it to gaseous steam. |
What equation determines the heat added in the sections where the temperature is rising in the below diagram? | q = mcΔT This formula calculates heat required to raise a certain mass of a substance by a change in temperature ΔT. where: |
What is the value of specific heat (c) for water? | Water's specific heat is c = 1 cal/gºK. In SI units, c ≈ 4.2 J/gºK. |
What is the equation to calculate heat required when at the plateaus in the phase change diagram below? | q = mHL This formula calculates heat required to change a certain mass of a substance from one phase to another. HL would be Hf for the first plateau and Hv for the second plateau. where: |
How much heat would be required to increase the temperature of 20g water by 5 degrees, starting at 20 ºC? | 100 cal. At 20 ºC, water is a liquid and has specific heat c = 1 cal/gºC. |
Define: Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP) | STP is 0º C and 1 atm Chemistry exams occasionally refer to Standard Ambient Temperature and Pressure (SATP), which you should know is 25ºC and 1 atm. |
What are the assumptions of: the kinetic molecular theory of gases | The kinetic molecular theory assumes an idealized version of gas, which makes calculating relationships easier. There are four assumptions:
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Give the relationship and equation for: Charles's Law | Charles' Law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to temperature while at a constant pressure. Equation: |
If the pressure of an ideal gas system is held constant but the temperature is doubled, what does Charles's Law predict will happen to the volume? | The system's volume will double also. Charles's Law indicates that at a constant pressure, the temperature and volume of a gas are directly proportional. |
Give the relationship and equation for: Boyle's Law | Boyle's Law states that the volume of a gas is inversely proportional to its pressure while at a constant temperature. Equation: |
If the temperature of an ideal gas system is held constant but the pressure is reduced by 1/2, what does Boyle's Law predict will happen to the volume? | The system's volume will double. Boyle's Law indicates that at a constant temperature, the pressure and volume of a gas are inversely proportional. |
Give the relationship and equation for: Avogadro's Law | Avogadro's Law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to the number of moles at a constant temperature and pressure. V / n = k where: |
If the pressure and temperature of an ideal gas system are held constant but the number of moles is reduced to 1/3 of the original value, what does Avogadro's Law predict will happen to the system's volume? | The system's volume will decrease to 1/3 also. Avogadro's Law indicates that at a constant pressure and temperature, the number of moles and volume of a gas are directly proportional. |
Give the equation for: the Ideal Gas Law | The Ideal Gas Law combines Charles', Boyle's, and Avogadro's Laws into one: PV = nRT where: |
What is the volume of 1 mole of gas molecules at STP? | At STP, one mole of gas has a volume of 22.4 L This is called the standard molar volume, and is true for a mole of any ideal gas at STP. This value can be calculated using the Ideal Gas Law, but is worth memorizing. |
Give the equation for: calculating the partial pressure of a gas in a mixture | PA = xAPtotal where: |
Give the equation for: Dalton's Law | Ptotal = PA + PB + PC + … Dalton's Law states that the total pressure of a system of ideal gases can be thought of as the sum of all of the partial pressures that each gas exerts. |
Give the equation: for internal energy (average kinetic energy) of a gas | U = KEavg = (3/2)nRT where: |
When does a gas deviate from its ideal state? | Gases deviate from ideal at:
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Why does low temperature and high pressure cause a gas deviate from its ideal state? | Gases deviate from ideal at low temperatures, because the molecules have very low kinetic energy (hence low velocity) and will start to attract based on the intermolecular forces. Gases deviate from ideal at high pressures or very low volumes, because the molecules have very little actual space to move in and will start to exhibit characteristics more like a fluid than a gas. |
Give the equation: Van Der Waals Equation | (P + a(n/V)2)(V - nb) = nRT where: Note: the van der Waals equation predicts the behavior of non-ideal gases, taking into account the intermolecular attractive forces of the gas molecules and the space taken up by the non-point molecules. |
Explain whether a polar or nonpolar real gas will deviate more from ideal? | Polar gases will deviate more from ideal. (P + a(n/V)2)(V - nb) = nRT Remember: 'a' is the attractiveness between molecules. When 'a' is big (polar=attractive) the pressure term will be larger. Effectively, the gas will experience more pressure holding it together than the ideal gas law predicts. |
Explain whether a small or large molecule size real gas will deviate more from ideal? | Larger molecule gases will deviate more from ideal. (P + a(n/V)2)(V - nb) = nRT Remember: 'b' is the bigness of the actual molecules. When 'b' is big (larger size=big) the volume term will be smaller. Effectively, the gas will have less space to move in than the ideal gas law predicts. |
Define: absolute temperature | The absolute temperature is any temperature that is given in Kelvin (K). 0 K is the temperature at which all molecules are assumed to cease moving completely. To convert Kelvin to Celcius: K = C + 273.15 |