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Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001

Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

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Page 1: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Liquids & Solids

Dr. Ron RusayFall 2001

Page 2: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

States of Matter

Page 3: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter
Page 4: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Changes of State

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Page 5: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Energy of Phase Changes

Page 6: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter
Page 7: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Heating Curve for H2O

Calculate the heat necessary to completely boil 1.0 kg of ice that is at -5oC.

Cpice=0.50 cal/g xoC

Cpliq=1.00 cal/g xoC

Cpvap=0.48 cal/g xoC

Hfusion= +80.0 cal/g

Hvapor= +540 cal/g

+722.5 kcal = +3,023 kJ

Page 8: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Vapor Pressure vs. Temperature

Page 9: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Vapor Pressures of Liquids

Page 10: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Periodicity: Boiling Point

Boiling Point: Temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the atmospheric pressure. Higher vapor pressure : Lower boiling point.

Does water boil at the same temperature in Concord and Tahoe?

Page 11: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Boiling Points of Simple Hydrogen Compounds

What can explain the trends?

Page 12: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter
Page 13: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Intermolecular Hydrogen Bonds in H2O

Besides oxygen, both nitrogen and fluorine form intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Other atoms DO NOT.

Page 14: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Views of Water

104.5o Angle Dipole Moment

Page 15: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Dissolution of NaCl in Water

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Page 16: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Intermolecular ForcesIonic & Polar Interactions: + and - ; + ---- -

Page 17: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Ion-Dipole Forces

Page 18: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Dipole-Dipole Forces

FG11_004.JPG

Page 19: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Surface Forces of a Liquid

Viscosity & Surface Tension of liquids are directly related to the strength of the intermolecular forces:

Eg. Water versus gasoline. 1.00 vs 0.20 centipoise and 70 vs. 15 dynes/cm 2 respectively.

Page 20: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Close Packing

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Page 21: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Close Packed Spheres

Page 22: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Three Types of Crystalline Solids

Ionic Molecular Metallic

Page 23: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Diamond and Graphite

Page 24: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Cross Section of a Metal

Page 25: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Crystal Lattice

Page 26: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Cubic Lattices

Page 27: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Space-Filling Cubic Cells

Page 28: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Crystal Lattice of NaCl

Page 29: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Unit Cell of NaCl

Page 30: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Unit Cells

Page 31: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

X-Ray Crystallography

Page 32: Liquids & Solids Dr. Ron Rusay Fall 2001. States of Matter

Table 11.6