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Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

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Page 1: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

Unit 8, Chapter 25

CPO ScienceFoundations of Physics

Page 2: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

Unit 8: Matter and Energy

25.1 Matter and Atoms

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of

Matter

25.3 Heat and Thermal Energy

Chapter 25 Energy, Matter, and Atoms

Page 3: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

Chapter 25 Objectives1. Describe the relationship between atoms and matter.

2. Find an element in the periodic table.

3. Identify the differences between elements, compounds, and mixtures.

4. Convert temperatures between Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin scales.

5. Understand the concept of absolute zero temperature.

6. Describe the phases of matter and explain solid, liquid, and gas in terms of energy and atoms.

7. Describe the concepts of heat and thermal energy and apply them to real-life systems.

8. Perform basic calculations with specific heat.

Page 4: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

Chapter 25 Vocabulary Terms atom compound element mixture molecule periodic

table Kelvin Celsius thermome

ter Fahrenheit

specific heat temperature calorie absolute zero random melting point heat of

vaporization boiling point evaporation ionized

condensation thermal energy relative

humidity British thermal

unit (BTU) heat solid plasma liquid heat of fusion gas

Page 5: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Matter and Atoms

Key Question:

What are the properties of different elements?

*Students read Section 25.1 AFTER Investigation 25.1

Page 6: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Matter and Atoms

We have partial answers to these three questions for all types of matter:

1. What is the smallest piece of matter?2. Why can the same kind of matter assume

different forms, like solid or liquid?3. How can one kind of matter (like wood)

turn into another kind of matter with very different properties (like ashes)?

Page 7: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Brownian Motion

A large floating dust speck moves smoothly because it is much larger than a particle of water.

A tiny dust speck shows Brownian motion because of collisions with particles of water.

Page 8: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Size of atoms The head of a pin contains more than 1020 atoms.

A sheet of thin aluminum foil is 200,000 atoms thick.

Page 9: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Classification of matter A molecule is a group of two or more atoms that

are joined together.

Most matter you encounter is made of molecules, or mixtures of molecules.

Page 10: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 First theory of matter

The ancient Greeks proposed that all matter was made of four fundamental elements: — air, fire, water, and earth.

Page 11: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Elements

Today we know that nearly all the matter in the world is made from 92 different elements.

The periodic table shows the elements in order from atomic number 1 (hydrogen) to number 92 (uranium).

Page 12: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics
Page 13: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.1 Elements

At the time of this writing, scientists have created elements 93 to 116 in research laboratories.

We don’t find much of elements 93 to 116 in nature because all of these elements are radioactive and break down into other elements.

Page 14: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics
Page 15: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of Matter

Key Question:

What is temperature?

*Students read Section 25.2 AFTER Investigation 25.2

Page 16: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of Matter

In the Fahrenheit scale, water freezes at 32 degrees and boils at 212 degrees

The Celsius scale divides the difference between the freezing and boiling points of water into 100 degrees (instead of 180).

Page 17: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Converting temperatures

A friend in Paris sends you a recipe for a cake.

The French recipe says to bake the cake at a temperature of 200°C for 45 minutes.

At what temperature should you set your oven, which reads temperature in Fahrenheit?

Page 18: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of Matter

All thermometers are based on some physical property (such as color or volume) that changes with temperature.

A thermistor is a device that changes its electrical resistance as the temperature changes.

A thermocouple is another electrical sensor that measures temperature.

Page 19: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of Matter

Temperature measures the kinetic energy per atom due to random motion.

Random motion is motion that is scattered equally in all directions.

In pure random motion the average change in position is zero.

Page 20: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of Matter

When the temperature gets down to absolute zero, the atoms are said have the lowest energy they can have and the temperature cannot get any lower.

Technically, we believe atoms never stop moving completely.

Figuring out what happens when atoms are cooled to absolute zero is an area of active research.

Page 21: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Temperature and the Phases of Matter

The Kelvin temperature scale is useful for many scientific calculations because it starts at absolute zero.

The Kelvin scale is used because it measures the actual energy of atoms.

A temperature in Celsius measures only the relative energy, relative to zero Celsius.

Page 22: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Phases of Matter

The three most common phases of matter are called solid, liquid, and gas.

At temperatures greater than 10,000 K the atoms in a gas start to break apart.

In the plasma state, matter becomes ionized.

Page 23: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics
Page 24: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Phase changes When thermal energy is added or subtracted

from a material, either the temperature changes, or the phase changes, but usually not both at the same time.

Page 25: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Change from solid to liquid The melting point is the

temperature at which a material changes phase from solid to liquid.

Melting occurs when the kinetic energy of individual atoms equals the attractive force between atoms.

The heat of fusion is the amount of energy it takes to change one kilogram of material from solid to liquid or vice versa.

Page 26: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Energy and Heat of Fusion

E = mhf

Heat of Fusion (J/kg)

Mass (kg)

Heat energy (J)

Page 27: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Calculate Energy

How many joules does it take to melt a 30 gram ice cube at 0°C?

Page 28: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Evaporation

Evaporation occurs when molecules go from liquid to gas at temperatures below the boiling point.

Evaporation takes energy away from a liquid.

The average energy of the molecules left behind is lowered.

Evaporation cools the surface of a liquid because the fastest molecules escape and carry energy away.

Page 29: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Condensation Condensation occurs when

molecules go from gas to liquid at temperatures below the boiling point.

Condensation raises the temperature of a gas because atoms in a gas have more energy than atoms in a liquid.

When air is saturated, it means the processes of evaporation and condensation are exactly balanced.

Page 30: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Change from liquid to gas The boiling point is the

temperature at which the phase changes from liquid to gas.

Just as with melting, it takes energy for an atom to go from liquid to gas.

The heat of vaporization is the amount of energy it takes to convert one kilogram of liquid to one kilogram of gas.

Page 31: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Energy and Heat ofVaporization

E = mhv

Heat of Vaporization

(J/kg)

Mass (kg)

Heat energy (J)

Page 32: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Calculate Energy A steam iron is used to remove

the wrinkles from clothes.

The iron boils water in a small chamber and vents steam out the bottom.

How much energy does it require to change one-half gram (0.0005 kg, or about half a teaspoon) of water into steam?

Page 33: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.3 Heat and Thermal Energy

Key Question:

What is the relationship between heat, temperature, and energy?

*Students read Section 25.3 AFTER Investigation 25.3

Page 34: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.3 Heat and Thermal Energy

Temperature is NOT the same as thermal energy.

Thermal energy is energy stored in materials because of differences in temperature.

The thermal energy of an object is the total amount of random kinetic energy for all the atoms in the object.

Remember, temperature measures the random kinetic energy of each atom.

Page 35: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.3 Heat and Thermal Energy

Imagine heating a cup of coffee to a temperature of 100°C.

Next think about heating up 1,000 cups of coffee to 100°C.

The final temperature is the same in both cases but the amount of energy needed is very different.

Page 36: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.3 Heat and Thermal Energy

Heat is what we call thermal energy that is moving.

The joule (J) is the unit of heat (or thermal energy) used for physics and engineering.

The calorie is a unit of heat often used in chemistry.

Heat flows from the hot coffee to the cooler air in the room.

Page 37: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.3 Specific Heat The specific heat is the quantity of heat it

takes to raise the temperature of one kilogram of material by one degree Celsius.

Page 38: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.3 Specific Heat

The temperature of gold rises quickly compared with water because its specific heat is much less than the specific heat of water.

Page 39: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Heat Equation

E = mcp(T2-T1)

Specific heat (J/kgoC)

Mass (kg)

Heat energy (J)

Change inTemperature

(oC)

Page 40: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

25.2 Calculate Heat One kilogram of water is heated

in a microwave oven that delivers 500 watts of heat to the water.

One watt is a flow of energy of one joule per second.

If the water starts at 10°C, how much time does it take to heat up to 100°C?

Page 41: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

26.3 First Law of Thermodynamics

Energy loss is equal to energy gain.

Page 42: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

26.3 Second Law of Thermodynamics

Page 43: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics
Page 44: Unit 8, Chapter 25 CPO Science Foundations of Physics

Application: The Refrigerator