Title: Liquids and Solids
1CHAPTER 9
2Description of Liquids Solids
- Solids liquids are condensed states
- atoms, ions, molecules are close to one another
- highly incompressible
- Solid molecules are packed closely together. The
molecules are so rigidly packed that they cannot
easily slide past each other. - Liquids gases are fluids
- easily flow
- Liquids molecules are held closer together than
gas molecules, but not so rigidly that the
molecules cannot slide past each other. - Intermolecular attractions in liquids solids
are strong
3Description of Liquids Solids
4Description of Liquids Solids
- Converting a gas into a liquid or solid requires
the molecules to get closer to each other - cool or compress.
- Converting a solid into a liquid or gas requires
the molecules to move further apart - heat or reduce pressure.
- The forces holding solids and liquids together
are called intermolecular forces.
5Kinetic-Molecular Description of Liquids Solids
- strengths of interactions among particles
- degree of ordering of particles
- Gaseslt Liquids lt Solids
6Intermolecular Attractions
- The covalent bond holding a molecule together is
an intramolecular forces. - The attraction between molecules is an
intermolecular force. - Intermolecular forces are much weaker than
intramolecular forces (e.g. 16 kJ/mol vs. 431
kJ/mol for HCl). - When a substance melts or boils the
intermolecular forces are broken (not the
covalent bonds). - When a substance condenses intermolecular forces
are formed.
7Intermolecular Attractions
8Intermolecular Attractions
- Dipole-Dipole Forces
- Dipole-dipole forces exist between neutral polar
molecules. - Polar molecules need to be close together.
- Weaker than ion-dipole forces
- Q1 and Q2 are partial charges.
9Intermolecular Attractions
- Dipole-Dipole Forces
- There is a mix of attractive and repulsive
dipole-dipole forces as the molecules tumble. - If two molecules have about the same mass and
size, then dipole-dipole forces increase with
increasing polarity.
10Intermolecular Attractions
- Dipole-dipole interactions
- consider NH3 a very polar molecule
11Intermolecular Attractions
- Dispersion Forces
- Weakest of all intermolecular forces.
- It is possible for two adjacent neutral molecules
to affect each other. - The nucleus of one molecule (or atom) attracts
the electrons of the adjacent molecule (or atom). - For an instant, the electron clouds become
distorted. - In that instant a dipole is formed (called an
instantaneous dipole).
12Intermolecular Attractions
Dispersion Forces
13Intermolecular Attractions
- Polarizability is the ease with which an electron
cloud can be deformed. - The larger the molecule (the greater the number
of electrons) the more polarizable.
14Intermolecular Attractions
15Intermolecular Attractions
- Dispersion Forces
- London dispersion forces depend on the shape of
the molecule. - The greater the surface area available for
contact, the greater the dispersion forces. - London dispersion forces between spherical
molecules are lower than between sausage-like
molecules.
16Intermolecular Attractions
- Hydrogen bonding
- consider H2O
17Intermolecular Attractions
- Hydrogen Bonding
- Special case of dipole-dipole forces.
- By experiments boiling points of compounds with
H-F, H-O, and H-N bonds are abnormally high. - Intermolecular forces are abnormally strong.
18Intermolecular Attractions
- Hydrogen Bonding
- H-bonding requires H bonded to an electronegative
element (most important for compounds of F, O,
and N). - Electrons in the H-X (X electronegative
element) lie much closer to X than H. - H has only one electron, so in the H-X bond, the
? H presents an almost bare proton to the ?- X. - Therefore, H-bonds are strong.
19Intermolecular Attractions
Hydrogen Bonding
20Intermolecular Attractions
- Hydrogen Bonding
- Ice Floating
- Solids are usually more closely packed than
liquids - therefore, solids are more dense than liquids.
- Ice is ordered with an open structure to optimize
H-bonding. - Therefore, ice is less dense than water.
- In water the H-O bond length is 1.0 Å.
- The OH hydrogen bond length is 1.8 Å.
- Ice has waters arranged in an open, regular
hexagon. - Each ? H points towards a lone pair on O.
- Ice floats, so it forms an insulating layer on
top of lakes, rivers, etc. Therefore, aquatic
life can survive in winter.
21Intermolecular Attractions
- Hydrogen Bonding
- Hydrogen bonds are responsible for
- Protein Structure
- Protein folding is a consequence of H-bonding.
- DNA Transport of Genetic Information
22Comparing Intermolecular Attractions
23Intermolecular Attractions
- Coulombs law the attraction energy determine
- melting boiling points of ionic compounds
- the solubility of ionic compounds
- Arrange the following ionic compounds in the
expected order of increasing melting and boiling
points. - NaF, CaO, CaF2
24Intermolecular Attractions and Phase Changes
25Intermolecular Attractions and Phase Changes
26Evaporation
- Process in which molecules escape from the
surface of a liquid - T dependent
27Evaporation
28Vapor Pressure
- pressure exerted by a liquids vapor on its
surface at equilibrium - Vap. Press. (torr) for 3 Liquids Norm.
B.P. - 0oC 20oC 30oC
- diethyl ether 185 442 647 36oC
- ethanol 12 44 74 78oC
- water 5 18 32 100oC
29Vapor Pressure
- Some of the molecules on the surface of a liquid
have enough energy to escape the attraction of
the bulk liquid. - These molecules move into the gas phase.
- As the number of molecules in the gas phase
increases, some of the gas phase molecules strike
the surface and return to the liquid. - After some time the pressure of the gas will be
constant at the vapor pressure.
30Vapor Pressure
- Dynamic Equilibrium the point when as many
molecules escape the surface as strike the
surface. - Vapor pressure is the pressure exerted when the
liquid and vapor are in dynamic equilibrium.
31Vapor Pressure
- If equilibrium is never established then the
liquid evaporates. - Volatile substances evaporate rapidly.
- The higher the temperature, the higher the
average kinetic energy, the faster the liquid
evaporates.
32Vapor Pressure
- Liquids boil when the external pressure equals
the vapor pressure. - Temperature of boiling point increases as
pressure increases. - Two ways to get a liquid to boil increase
temperature or decrease pressure. - Pressure cookers operate at high pressure. At
high pressure the boiling point of water is
higher than at 1 atm. Therefore, there is a
higher temperature at which the food is cooked,
reducing the cooking time required.
33Boiling Points
- Boiling point is temperature at which the
liquids vapor pressure is equal to applied
pressure - normal boiling point is boiling point _at_ 1 atm
34Distillation
- Process in which a mixture or solution is
separated into its components on the basis of the
differences in boiling points of the components - Distillation is another vapor pressure
phenomenon.
35The Liquid State
- energy associated with changes of state
- heat of vaporization
- amount of heat required to change 1 g of a
liquid substance to a gas at constant T - units of J/g
- heat of condensation
- reverse of heat of vaporization
36The Liquid State
- molar heat of vaporization or DHvap
- amount of heat required to change 1 mol of a
liquid to a gas at constant T - units of J/mol
- molar heat of condensation
- reverse of molar heat of vaporization
37The Liquid State
38Phase Changes
- Surface molecules are only attracted inwards
towards the bulk molecules. - Sublimation solid ? gas.
- Vaporization liquid ? gas.
- Melting or fusion solid ? liquid.
- Deposition gas ? solid.
- Condensation gas ? liquid.
- Freezing liquid ? solid.
39Phase Changes
- Sublimation ?Hsub gt 0 (endothermic).
- Vaporization ?Hvap gt 0 (endothermic).
- Melting or Fusion ?Hfus gt 0 (endothermic).
- Deposition ?Hdep lt 0 (exothermic).
- Condensation ?Hcon lt 0 (exothermic).
- Freezing ?Hfre lt 0 (exothermic).
- Generally heat of fusion (enthalpy of fusion) is
less than heat of vaporization - it takes more energy to completely separate
molecules, than partially separate them.
40Phase Changes
- All phase changes are possible under the right
conditions (e.g. water sublimes when snow
disappears without forming puddles). - The sequence
- heat solid ? melt ? heat liquid ? boil ? heat gas
- is endothermic.
- The sequence
- cool gas ? condense ? cool liquid ? freeze ?
- cool solid
- is exothermic.
41Phase Changes
42Phase Changes
- Plot of temperature change versus heat added is a
heating curve. - During a phase change, adding heat causes no
temperature change. - These points are used to calculate ?Hfus and
?Hvap. - Supercooling When a liquid is cooled below its
melting point and it still remains a liquid. - Achieved by keeping the temperature low and
increasing kinetic energy to break intermolecular
forces.
43Phase Changes and Heating Curves
44Critical Temperature and Pressure
- Gases liquefied by increasing pressure at some
temperature. - Critical temperature the minimum temperature for
liquefaction of a gas using pressure. - Critical pressure pressure required for
liquefaction.
45Phase Diagrams (P vs T)
- convenient way to display all of the different
phases of a substance - phase
- diagram for
- water
46Phase Diagrams (P vs T)
- phase diagram for carbon dioxide
47Synthesis Question
- Maxwell House Coffee Company decaffeinates its
coffee beans using an extractor that is 7.0 feet
in diameter and 70.0 feet long. Supercritical
carbon dioxide at a pressure of 300.0 atm and
temperature of 100.00C is passed through the
stainless steel extractor. The extraction vessel
contains 100,000 pounds of coffee beans soaked in
water until they have a water content of 50.
48Synthesis Question
- This process removes 90 of the caffeine in a
single pass of the beans through the extractor.
Carbon dioxide that has passed over the coffee is
then directed into a water column that washes the
caffeine from the supercritical CO2. How many
moles of carbon dioxide are present in the
extractor?
49Synthesis Question
50Synthesis Question
51Group Question
- How many CO2 molecules are there in 1.0 cm3 of
the Maxwell House Coffee Company extractor? How
many more CO2 molecules are there in a cm3 of the
supercritical fluid in the Maxwell House
extractor than in a mole of CO2 at STP?