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Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will: Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature . Apply Pascal’s, Archimedes’, and Bernoulli’s principles in everyday situations .

Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will: Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature. Apply Pascal’s,

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Page 1: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

Chapter 13 States of MatterIn this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature .Apply Pascal’s, Archimedes’, and Bernoulli’s principles in everyday situations .

Page 2: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

Chapter 13 SectionsSection 13.1: Properties of FluidsSection 13.2: Forces within LiquidsSection 13.3: Fluids at Rest and in

MotionSection 13.4: Solids

Page 3: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

Section 13.1 Properties of Fluids Objectives

Describe how fluids create pressure.Calculate the pressure, volume, and

number of moles of a gas.Compare gases and plasma.

Page 4: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

INTRODUCTIONFluid – any material that flows and offers

little resistance to a change in its shape when under pressure. Liquids, gases, and plasma are fluids.

Most of our life is spent in the 2 fluid states of liquid (water for example) and gas (we live and breathe in the gaseous atmosphere).

Page 5: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

PRESSURE Fluid – any material that flows and offers little resistance

to a change in its shape when under pressure. They have no definite shape of their own. Liquids, gases, & plasma are fluids

Kinetic Molecular Theory – this theory is based on the assumption that matter is made up of many tiny particles that are always in motion. In a hot body the particles move faster and thus have a higher energy than particles in a cooler body.

The Kinetic Molecular Theory is based on 3 simplified assumptionsGases are made up of a large number of very small

particles.The particles are in constant, random motion.The particles make perfectly elastic collisions with the

walls of the container that hold them.

Page 6: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

PRESSURE Pressure – the force on a surface divided by the area of

the surface. The force on a unit surface area. (or) Force per unit area. Unit for pressure is the PASCAL. Equation P = F / A

Pascal – unit for pressure. Its abbreviation is Pa. It is equal to one Newton per square meter (m2); N/m2.

The Pascal is a small unit so kilopascal is often used (kPa)P = F / A Pressure = Force divided by AreaIf you stand on a frozen lake the pressure is greater

than if you lay on it since the surface area is smaller. So if you were trying to get someone that fell through the ice you should lay down & slide out not walk out.

Earth’s pressure at Sea Level is about 100,000 Pa (100 kPa)

Page 7: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

PRESSUREExample 1 p. 34319.3 cm2 * (__1 m__)2 = 19.3 *__1___

= .00193m2 (100 cm )2 10000⅔(19.3) = 12.867 cm2 = .0012867 m2 (since only

2 of 3 legs are down)a. P = F / A b. P = F / A P = 405 / .00193 P = 405 / .0012867 P = 209,844.56 Pa P = 314,758.685

PaSkip Practice Problems # 1-5 p. 344

Page 8: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

THE GAS LAWSBoyle’s Law – it is named for 17th century chemist and physicist

Robert Boyle. It states that for a fixed sample of gas at constant temperature, the volume of the gas varies inversely with the pressure. P1V1 = P2V2.

Charles’ Law – named for Jacques Charles. It states that the volume of a sample of gas varies directly with its KELVIN temperature.

V1 = V2 T1 T2

Combined Gas Law – is a combination of Boyle’s Law and Charles’ Law. It states for a fixed amount of an ideal gas, the pressure times the volume divided by the KELVIN temperature equals a constant.P1V1 = P2V2 T1 T2

Page 9: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

THE GAS LAWSThe combined gas law reduces to Boyle’s Law under conditions of

constant temperature and to Charles’ law under conditions of constant pressure.

You use the kinetic molecular theory to discover how the constant in the combined gas law depends on the number of particles N.

If the number of particles increases the number of collisions increase and increases the pressure. If the number of particles decreases the number of collisions decrease and decreases the pressure.

You can conclude that the constant in the combined gas law equation is proportional to N

_PV = kN T Boltzmann’s Constant – the constant k in the equation above.

It has a value of 1.38 * 10-23 Pa*m3/K.

Page 10: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

THE GAS LAWSMole – is equal to 6.022 * 1023 particles. It is

abbreviated as mol and is represented by “n”.Avogadro’s Number - 6.022 * 1023. It is numerically

equal to the number of particles in a sample of matter whose mass equals the molar mass of the substance.

If you use moles instead of the number of particles it changes the Boltzmann’s constant. This new constant is abbreviated “R” and has the value 8.31 Pa*m3 / (mol*K).

Ideal Gas Law – states for an ideal gas, the pressure times the volume is equal to the number of moles multiplied by the constant R and the KELVIN temperature.

PV = nRTThe ideal gas law predicts behavior of gases very well,

except under conditions of high pressure or low temperature.

Page 11: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

THE GAS LAWSExample 2 p. 346a. P1V1 = P2V2 b. PV = nRT

T1 T2 101300(.02) = n8.31(273) 101.3(20) = 145V 2026 = 2268.63n

273 120 .893 mol = n 243120 = 39585V c. m = Mn 6.142 L = V m = 39.9(.893) m = 35.633 gSkip Practice Problems #6-9 p. 347

Page 12: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

THERMAL EXPANSIONGases expand as their temperatures increase.When heated all forms of matter generally become less dense

and expand to fill more space.Thermal Expansion – a property of all forms of matter

that causes the matter to expand, becoming less dense, when heated.

Thermal expansion has many useful applications, such as circulating air in a room.

When the air near the floor of a room is warmed, gravity pulls down the denser, colder air from near the ceiling, which pushes the warmer air upward.

This circulation of air within a room is called a convection current.

When a liquid is heated, particle motion causes these groups to expand in the same way that particles in a solid are pushed apart.

The spaces between groups increase. As a result, the whole liquid expands.

Page 13: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

THERMAL EXPANSIONWith an equal change in temperature, liquids expand

considerably more than solids, but not as much as gases.You know that matter expands as it is heated. Based on which you might predict that ice would be more

dense than water, and therefore, it should sink. However, when water is heated from 0°C to 4°C, instead of

expanding, it contracts as the forces between particles increase and the ice crystals collapse.

The practical result is that water is most dense at 4°C and ice floats.

This fact is very important to our lives and environment. If ice sank, lakes would freeze from the bottom each winter and many would never melt completely in the summer.

Page 14: Chapter 13 States of Matter In this chapter you will:  Explain the expansion and contraction of matter caused by changes in temperature.  Apply Pascal’s,

PLASMAPlasma – a gaslike, fluid state of matter

made up of negatively charged electrons and positively charged ions that can conduct electricity. It makes up most of the matter of the universe such as stars. The difference between gas and plasma is plasma can conduct electricity.

Skip 13.1 Section Review p. 348