Title: Heating and Cooling Curves continued
1Heating and Cooling Curves continued
- Harry S Truman Chemistry Dept.
2How does kinetic energy fit on the heating curve?
- As the phase changes from solid to liquid or
liquid to gas and entropy increases potential
energy decreases - As the temperature increases, so does the kinetic
energy (T KE up) - During the flat portions of the heating curve and
entropy increases and so does Potential Energy.
(?S up PE up) - If KE increases then PE stays constant and if PE
increases then KE stays constant.
3Which segments have an increase in KE? Which have
an increase in PE? Which have an increase in ?S?
4A few other key facts about the heating curve
5A few other key facts about the heating curve
6A few other key facts about the heating curve
7What other curves do we have besides the heating
curve?
- Cooling Curve shows the changes in phase,
energy and temperature as a substance cools down
over the course of time.
8What does the cooling curve look like?
9What are the parts of the cooling curve?
10What are the parts of the cooling curve?
11What are the parts of the cooling curve?
12What are the parts of the cooling curve?
13How does the cooling curve relate to the heating
curve?
- During the decline temperature is decreasing so
kinetic energy is decreasing. (T down KE down) - During the flat sections entropy is decreasing so
potential energy is decreasing (?S and PE down) - The temperature at which a sample freezes is the
same as which it melts (TMTF) - The temperature at which a sample boils is the
same at which it condenses (TBTC)
14Summary
- The heating curve and cooling curve are similar
yet opposite. They both show phase, energy and
temperature changes, but in the cooling curve KE,
T, PE and ?S all decrease (at different points).
Freezing and melting both happen at the same
temperature much like condensation and
evaporation.
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