Humboldt State University ® Department of Chemistry

Richard A. Paselk

Chem 107

Fundamentals of Chemistry

Fall 2008

Lecture Notes: 20 November

© R. Paselk 2005
 
     
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Liquids & Solids

Gases vs. Liquids vs. Solids:

These melting points are determined by the types of forces involved (van der Waals, ionic, metallic, or covalent), and, to a lesser extent by the sizes of the particles.

Liquids:

The particles of a liquid are in continuous motion, but the distances between collisions are very short compared to those of gases. Thus liquids are largely incompressible - need to increase pressure about a million-fold to halve volume. Diffusion though liquids is much slower than in gases (hours to days vs. seconds to minutes).

typical heating curve plot from solid to vapor showing horizontal regions during melting and boiling regions

So what's going on? For each phase see a steady, linear increase in temperature with added energy (heat). But there are definite breaks where energy is added (lost on cooling) when a phase change takes place. Let's look in a bit more detail.


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Last modified 20 November 2008