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States of Matter

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STATES OF MATTER

Matter
Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. All matter is made of atoms. Atoms are the
smallest particle of matter. They are so small that you cannot see them with your eyes or even
with a standard microscope. A standard sheet of paper is about a million atoms thick. Science has
come up with a technology to identify atoms called a scanning tunneling microscope (STM)
which uses electricity to map atoms. There is more about atoms later, but first let's learn about
the three states of matter. There are five known phases, or states, of matter: solids, liquids, gases,
plasma and Bose-Einstein condensates. The main difference in the structures of each state is in
the densities of the particles.

Solids
 Matter that is composed of atoms packed tightly together are known as solids. You cannot
walk through a solid wall. The matter is packed so tight that it prevents you from moving
through it. Solids hold their shape at room temperature. The pencil that you left in the desk at
school will still be the same shape when you return tomorrow.
 Even in solids there is a small space between the atoms. Depending on how tight the
atoms are packed determines the density of matter. This means that a one inch block of wood
is not as dense as a one inch block of gold. There is more space between the atoms of the
wood than the atoms of the gold.
 In a solid, particles are packed tightly together so they are unable to move about very
much.
 Particles of a solid have very low kinetic energy.
 The electrons of each atom are in motion, so the atoms have a small vibration, but they
are fixed in their position.
 Solids have a definite shape.
 They do not conform to the shape of the container in which they are placed.
 They also have a definite volume.
 The particles of a solid are already so tightly packed together that increasing pressure will
not compress the solid to a smaller volume.

Liquids
 Liquids do not hold their shape at room temperature.
 There is space between the atoms of a liquid and they move slightly all of the time.
 This allows you to stick your finger into water and pull it back out, letting the water fill
back in where your finger once was. But when walking through the water in the swimming
pool, you have to push the water out of the way ‐ this means that you feel the heaviness of
the water.
 Liquids flow or pour and can take on the shape of a container. If the liquid is poured into
a wider or narrower container, the liquid will take on that new shape.
 Liquids are affected by gravity. If you pour only half a cup of milk, the top half of the
container would have no milk. Liquids cannot be handed to another person well without the
container. Imagine going into a restaurant and asking for lemonade. What if the waiter just
put the lemonade into your hands ‐ no glass or cup? Could you lay the lemonade on the table
to drink in a few minutes? Even water in a river or a lake has a container ‐ the banks, the
bottom, the shore ‐ they form the container.
 In the liquid phase, the particles of a substance have more kinetic energy than those in a
solid.
 The liquid particles are not held in a regular arrangement, but are still very close to each
other so liquids have a definite volume.
 Liquids, like solids, cannot be compressed.
 Particles of a liquid have just enough room to flow around each other, so liquids have an
indefinite shape.
 A liquid will change shape to conform to its container.
 Force is spread evenly throughout the liquid, so when an object is placed in a liquid, the
liquid particles are displaced by the object.
 Particles of a liquid tend to be held by weak intermolecular attraction rather than moving
freely as the particles of a gas will. This cohesive force pulls the particles together to form
drops or streams.

Gases
 Gases not only do not hold their shape at room temperature, they don't even stay put.
 Gases are always moving. There is so much space between the atoms in gas that you can
move around in them easily. When you walk from one side of the room to the other, you have
walked through a bunch of gases that make up our air. You barely even know they are there.
 Gases will take on the shape of their container and can be compressed into a smaller
space.
 Like when we compress air into a balloon ‐ it fills out the balloon shape. Gases will fill
up the space too. You don't see only half of the balloon filled with air ‐ the air is not as
influenced by gravity as a liquid or a solid would be
 Gas particles have a great deal of space between them and have high kinetic energy.
 If unconfined, the particles of a gas will spread out indefinitely; if confined, the gas will
expand to fill its container.
 When a gas is put under pressure by reducing the volume of the container, the space
between particles is reduced, and the pressure exerted by their collisions increases.
 If the volume of the container is held constant, but the temperature of the gas increases,
then the pressure will also increase.
 Gas particles have enough kinetic energy to overcome intermolecular forces that hold
solids and liquids together,
 A gas has no definite volume and no definite shape.
Plasma
 Plasma is not a common state of matter here on Earth, but may be the most
common state of matter in the universe.
 Plasma consists of highly charged particles with extremely high kinetic energy.
 The noble gases(helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon and radon) are often used to
make glowing signs by using electricity to ionize them to the plasma state.
 Stars are essentially superheated balls of plasma.

Bose-Einstein condensates
In 1995, technology enabled scientists to create a new state of matter, the Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC). Using a combination of lasers and magnets, Eric Cornell and Carl Weiman
cooled a sample of rubidium to within a few degrees of absolute zero.
At this extremely low temperature, molecular motion comes very close to stopping altogether.
Since there is almost no kinetic energy being transferred from one atom to another, the atoms
begin to clump together.
There are no longer thousands of separate atoms, just one “super atom.” A BEC is used to study
quantum mechanics on a macroscopic level. Light appears to slow down as it passes through a
BEC, allowing study of the particle/wave paradox. A BEC also has many of the properties of a
superfluid — flowing without friction. BECs are also used to simulate conditions that might
apply in black holes. [Related: Properties of Matter: Bose-Einstein Condensate]

Change of State
 Matter can move from one state to another, but can still be the same substance. A
change of state, also called a phase change, is a physical change from one state of matter
to another, for example, from solid to liquid or from liquid to gas.

 Boil
 How does matter move from one phase to another? If the motion of the atoms is
altered by pressure or temperature, the state can change too. By lowering the temperature
of water, it can freeze into a solid. By heating water, it can become steam which is a gas.
Whether solid, liquid or gas ‐ water is still water.

 Pressure can change matter from one state to another. Deep in the earth solids turn
to liquids because the heavy weight of layers and layers of the earth push down on the
solids causing them to turn to liquid magma. This is just one example of how pressure
can change matter too.

 Other matter changes too, but often only exists in two states or requires the help
of humans and technology to move through all three phases. Water is the only matter on
earth that can be found naturally in all three - solid, liquid and a gas.
Adding energy to matter causes a physical change — matter moves from one state to
another.
For example, adding thermal energy — heat — to liquid water causes it to become steam or
vapor — a gas. Taking away energy also causes physical change, such as when liquid water
becomes ice — a solid — when heat is removed. Physical change also can be caused by
motion and pressure.

Melting and freezing


When heat is applied to a solid, its particles begin to vibrate faster and tend to move farther apart.
When the substance, at standard pressure, reaches a certain point — called the melting point —
the solid will begin to turn into a liquid. The melting point of a pure substance can often be
determined to within 0.1 degrees C, the point at which the solid and liquid phases are in
equilibrium. If you continue to apply heat to the sample, the temperature will not rise above the
melting point until the entire sample has been liquefied. The heat energy is being used to convert
the solid into the liquid form. Once the entire sample has become a liquid the temperature will
begin to rise again. Compounds that are otherwise very similar can have different melting points,
so melting point can be a useful way to distinguish among them. For example, sucrose has a
melting point of 367 F (186.1 C) while the melting point of glucose is 294.8 F (146 C). A solid
mixture, such as a metal alloy, can often be separated into its constituent parts by heating the
mixture and extracting the liquids as they reach their different melting points.

The freezing point is the temperature at which a liquid substance is cooled enough to form a
solid. As the liquid is cooled, particle motion slows. In many substances, the particles align in
precise, geometric patterns to form crystalline solids. Most liquids contract as they freeze. One of
the important characteristics of water is that it expands when it freezes, so ice floats. If ice didn’t
float, there would be no liquid water underneath a frozen body of water and many forms of
aquatic life would be impossible.
The freezing point is often nearly the same temperature as the melting point, but is not
considered to be characteristic of a substance, as several factors can alter it. For example, adding
dissolved substances, or solutes, to a liquid will depress the freezing point. An example of this is
using salt slurry to lower the temperature at which water freezes on our roads. Other liquids can
be cooled to temperatures well below their melting point before they begin to solidify. Such
liquids are said to be “super cooled” and often require the presence of a dust particle or “seed
crystal” to start the process of crystallization.

Sublimation
When a solid is converted directly into a gas without going through a liquid phase, the process is
known as sublimation. Sublimation occurs when kinetic energy of the particles is greater than
atmospheric pressure surrounding the sample. This may occur when the temperature of the
sample is rapidly increased beyond the boiling point (flash vaporization). More commonly, a
substance can be "freeze dried" by cooling it under vacuum conditions so that the water in the
substance undergoes sublimation and is removed from the sample. A few volatile substances will
undergo sublimation at normal temperature and pressure. The best known of these substances is
CO2 or “dry ice.”

Vaporization
Vaporization is the conversion of a liquid to a gas. Vaporization can occur through either
evaporation or boiling.
Because the particles of a liquid are in constant motion they frequently collide with each other,
transferring energy when they do so. This energy transference has little net effect beneath the
surface, but when enough energy is transferred to a particle near the surface; it may gain enough
energy to be knocked completely away from the sample as a free gas particle. This process is
called evaporation and it continues as long as liquid remains. It is interesting to note that a liquid
cools as it evaporates. The energy transferred to surface molecules, which causes their escape, is
carried away from the remaining liquid sample.
When enough heat is added to a liquid that vapor bubbles form below the surface of the liquid,
we say that the liquid is boiling. The temperature at which a liquid boils is variable. Boiling point
is dependent upon the pressure the substance is under. A liquid under higher pressure will require
more heat before vapor bubbles can form within it. At high altitudes, there is less atmospheric
pressure pressing down on the liquid, so it will boil at a lower temperature. The same amount of
liquid at sea level is under a greater atmospheric pressure and will boil at a higher temperature.

Condensation and deposition


Condensation is when a gas transforms into a liquid. Condensation occurs when a gas has been
cooled or compressed to the point where kinetic energy of the particles can no longer overcome
the intermolecular forces. An initial cluster of particles initiates the process which tends to
further cool the gas so that condensation continues. When the gas transforms directly into a solid,
without going through the liquid phase, it is called deposition or desublimation. An example of
this occurs when subfreezing temperatures convert water vapor in the atmosphere into frost or
ice. Frost tends to outline solid blades of grass and twigs because the air touching these solids
cools faster than air that is not touching a solid surface.

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