Title: Phase Changes
1Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- Intermolecular forces have a significant impact
on the physical properties of compounds - Boiling point
- Melting point
- Phase change
- A change in the physical state of a substance
Phase changes occur.
2Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- You should know what phase change occurs for each
of the following - Melting
- Freezing
- Vaporization
- Condensation
- Sublimation
- Deposition
3Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- Melting
- Solid ? Liquid
- Freezing
- Liquid ? Solid
- Vaporization
- Liquid ? Gas
- Condensation
- Gas ? Liquid
4Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- Sublimation
- Solid ? Gas
- Deposition
- Gas ? Solid
5Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- Every phase change is accompanied by a change in
the energy of the system. - Heat of fusion (DHfus)
- Enthalpy change required to change a solid at its
melting point to a liquid at the same temperature - Heat of vaporization (DHvap)
- Enthalpy change required to change a liquid at
its boiling point to a gas at the same temperature
6Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- Heat of Sublimation (DHsub)
- Enthalpy change required to transform a solid
directly into the gas phase - During a phase change, the two phases exist in
equilibrium. - At the melting point, solid and liquid phases are
in equilibrium. - At the boiling point, liquid and gas phases are
in equilibrium.
7Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- The heat added to the system at the melting and
boiling points goes into pulling the molecules
farther apart from each other. - The temperature of the substance does not rise
during a phase change.
8Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- Example Calculate the enthalpy change
associated with converting 12.0 g of ice at
-15oC to steam (water vapor) at 115oC under a
constant pressure of one atmosphere. The
specific heats of ice, water, and steam are
2.09J/g-K, 4.18 J/g-K, and 1.84 J/g-K,
respectively. For water, DHfus 6.01 kJ/mol and
DHvap 40.67 kJ/mol.
9Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- A ? B Ice is heating from -15oC to 0.oC with no
change in state - Use specific heat of ice to determine q (from -15
to 0.oC) - qA? B
10Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- B ? C Ice is melting with no change in T
- Use heat of fusion
- qB? C
11Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- C ? D Water is heating from 0. to 100.oC with
no change in state - Use specific heat of water to determine q (from
0. to 100. oC) - qC? D
12Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- D? E Water is boiling with no change in T
- Use heat of vaporization
- qD? E
13Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
- E ? F Steam is heating from 100. to 115oC with
no change in state - Use specific heat of steam to determine q (from
100. to 115oC) - qE? F
14Phase Changes Phase Diagrams
15Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Liquid-Vapor Equilibrium
- Molecules can escape from the surface of a liquid
by evaporation. - In a closed container, molecules in the gas phase
cannot escape, and the pressure exerted by the
vapor in the headspace begins to increase.
16Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Liquid-Vapor Equilibrium
- The liquid and vapor reach a state of dynamic
equilibrium - liquid molecules evaporate and vapor molecules
condense at the same rate. - The vapor pressure reaches a constant value.
- Vapor pressure pressure exerted by a vapor when
the liquid and vapor states are in dynamic
equilibrium.
17Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Boiling point
- the temperature at which the vapor pressure of a
liquid equals atmospheric pressure. - Normal boiling point
- the temperature at which the vapor pressure of a
liquid equals 760. torr or 1 atm
18Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Example Use the graph of vapor pressure as a
function of temperature to predict the normal
boiling point of diethyl ether and its
approximate boiling point at 200 torr and at 1000
torr. - Normal BP
- BP _at_ 200 torr
- BP _at_ 1000 torr
19Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Dynamic equilibria can exist between other states
of matter. - A phase diagram for a substance illustrates
- its physical state at various T and P
- the equilibria that exist between phases
20Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- The AB line is the liquid-vapor interface.
- It starts at the triple point (A)
- the point at which all three states are in
equilibrium.
21Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- It ends at the critical point (B)
- the temperature (critical temperature) and
pressure (critical pressure) above which the
liquid and vapor are indistinguishable from each
other
22Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Each point along this line is the boiling point
of the substance at that pressure.
23Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- The AD line is the interface between liquid and
solid. - The melting point at each pressure can be found
along this line.
24Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Below A the substance cannot exist in the liquid
state. - Along the AC line the solid and gas phases are in
equilibrium - The sublimation point at each pressure is along
this line.
25Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Example Given the phase diagram for water, which
point represents - the normal boiling point of water
- the normal melting point of water
- the critical point of water
- the triple point of water
26Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Example Given the phase diagram for carbon
dioxide, which line represents the equilibrium
between - Solid and liquid?
- Liquid and gas?
- Solid and gas?
27Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Example Using this phase diagram for water,
describe the changes in physical state that occur
when water is maintained at 0oC while the
pressure decreases from that at point 5 to that
at point 1. - 5
- 4
- 3
- 2
- 1
28Phase Changes and Phase Diagrams
- Example Using this phase diagram for water,
describe the changes in physical state that occur
when water is kept at 1 atm pressure while the
temperature decreases from that at point 9 to
that at point 6. - 9
- 8
- 7
- 4
- 6