Title: Unit 11: States of Matter
1Unit 11 States of Matter
2Types of Covalent Bonds
- Polar Covalent Bond
- e- are shared unequally
- asymmetrical e- density
- results in partial charges (dipole)
3Types of Covalent Bonds
- Nonpolar Covalent Bond
- e- are shared equally
- symmetrical e- density
- usually identical atoms
4If ?EN is Bond type is
lt 0.4 Nonpolar covalent
0.4 lt ? EN lt 1.7 Polar covalent
gt 1.7 Ionic
Given Electronegativities of these elements H
2.2 C 2.55 N 3.04 O 3.44 F 3.98 Na
0.93 K 0.82 P 2.19 S 2.58 Cl 3.16
Determine bond type for the following bonds H
H __________ H O ___________ H
C __________ Na Cl ___________
Take the absolute value of the difference!
5Intermolecular Forces (IMF)
- Attractive forces between molecules.
- Much weaker than
- chemical bonds
- within molecules (INTRAmolecular forces.
6London Dispersion Forces
- London dispersion forces
- Exist in all atoms and molecules
- Electrons within atoms are constantly moving
around. Sometimes they are not disbursed evenly
around the nucleus. - When atoms are close to each other, they are
attracted due to the temporary area of partial
and - charges (temporary dipoles) produced.
7London Dispersion Forces
8Dipole-Dipole Forces
- Attraction between two PERMANENT dipoles
- Polar molecules ONLY.
- Medium strength
- Stronger when molecules are closer together
9 Types of IMF
View animation online.
10Hydrogen Bonding
- Special kind of dipole-dipole
- Occurs between molecules that have an H bonded to
either O, N, or F. - Strongest
- Not chemical bonding
11Hydrogen Bonding
Animation of water molecules being attracted to
each other.
12IMF and Boiling Point
- The stronger the IMF, the higher the boiling
point.
Molecule IMF (s) present Molar Mass (g/mol) Boiling Point (oC)
CH4 16.05 - 164
HCl 36.46 - 85
H2O 18.02 100
London Disp.
London Disp. Dipole-Dipole
London Disp./Dipole-Dipole/Hydrogen Bonding
13Density
14Compressibility
The more empty space between particles, the
easier it is to compress it. Solids are not
easily compressed, liquids a little bit, gases a
lot.
15Liquid Properties
- Viscosity
- Resistance to flow
Oil
Viscosity Demo
Water
16Liquid Properties
- Surface Tension
- attractive force between particles in a liquid
that minimizes surface area. Creates a SURFACE
that keeps the liquid together.
17Detergents/Soap
- Oils dont mix with water.
- Fats/oils are non polar
- Water is polar
- LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE
- Soaps and detergents disrupt the hydrogen bonding
between the water molecules. - A micelle is formed. (Detergent wraps around
grease particle and it can be mixed with water.)
18Cohesion and Adhesion
- Cohesion is the force of attraction between
identical molecules in a liquid (cohesion is a
result of intermolecular forces). - Adhesion is the force of attraction between
liquid molecules and a solid that is touching
them.
19Liquid Properties
Meniscus of water in a glass tube is concave
adhesion gt cohesion Meniscus of Hg in a glass
tube is convex cohesion gt adhesion
20PROPERTIES OF SOLIDS
- Density Solids are denser than their liquid
form. - EXCEPT wax, cork, ice
- In these solids, the molecules are spaced farther
apart than in their liquid form so they float.
Ice
cork wax
21Crystalline vs. Amorphous
- A crystalline solid has particles which are
arranged in an orderly, geometric, 3-D structure.
- Examples sodium chloride, ice, gems and
minerals
22Types of Solids
In an amorphous solid, the particles are not
arranged in any particular pattern. Examples
rubber, plastics.
Amorphous (SiO2 - glass)
23Phase Changes
E. QmC?T D. Q mHv
Temperature
Tb ?
B. Q mHf C.
QmC?T Tm ? A. Q mC?T
Thermal Energy (Heat)
24Thermal Energy (heat)
- Phase Changes
- B and D represent phase changes
- Occur at constant temperature
- Temperature Changes
- A,C, and E
- Temp is changing
- Sloping portion of the graph
25Thermal Energy (heat )
- What is happening at each part of the graph
- A. Substance is a solid. Can heat it up or cool
it down along this line. - B. Phase change solid-liquid. The temperature
at B (Tm) is the melting (freezing) point. - C. Substance is a liquid. Can heat it up or
cool it down along this line. - D. Phase change liquid-gas. The temperature
at D (Tb) is the boiling (condensation) point. - E. Substance is a gas. Can heat it up or cool
it down along this line.
26Heat Calculations
- Q m c ? T
- Q heat or thermal energy in Joules (J) or
calories (cal) - m mass in grams (g)
- C specific heat in J/(g oC) or cal/(g oC)
- ?T change in temperature in oC
27Heat Calculations
- Q mHf
- Q heat or thermal energy in Joules (J) or
calories (cal) - m mass in grams (g)
- Hf Heat of fusion (J/g or cal/g) use for
liquid-solid phase change
28Heat Calculations
- Q mHv
- Q heat or thermal energy in Joules (J) or
calories (cal) - m mass in grams (g)
- Hv Heat of vaporization (J/g or cal/g) use for
gas-liquid phase change
29Things to remember
- You can move from left to right or right to left
along the curve. - If you move left to right
- all the processes are endothermic (heat must be
supplied). - Your answer for heat calculations will be
positive.
30Things to remember
- If you move right to left
- all the processes are exothermic (heat is
removed/released). - Your answer for heat calculations will be
negative. You have to write in the negative, but
you solve the problem the same way!