Transcript Slide 1

Chapter 17
Changes of Phase
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Phases of Matter
Four Phases of Matter:
• Solid
• Liquid
• Gas
Water
Plasma
• Plasma
Ice
Steam
Change of phase occurs when we pass from
one phase to another, such as water
(liquid) boiling to change into vapor (gas).
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Evaporation
Evaporation is a change of phase from
liquid to gas that takes place at the surface
of a liquid.
A random molecule at
the surface acquires
enough energy to
escape the attraction
force among the
molecules (which holds
the liquid together).
17-Jul-15
GAS
LIQUID
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Evaporative Cooling
Because only the most energetic molecules can
escape the surface, evaporation removes internal
energy from the liquid, that is, evaporation cools.
WET
CLOTH
Brr
HEAT
WET
BODY &
TOWEL
WET
TONGUE
HEAT
Wet towel cools head
17-Jul-15
Wetness cools person
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
HEAT
Wet tongue cools dog
Condensation
Condensation is the reverse of evaporation, a
change of phase from gas to liquid that takes
place at the surface of a liquid.
A random molecule from
the gas strikes the
surface and sticks
instead of bouncing
back into the gas.
GAS
LIQUID
Condensation heats.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Hot and Humid
A 90 degree day in a dry
climate, like San Jose, is
more comfortable than a
90 degree day in a humid
place like New Orleans.
In a dry climate you’re
cooled by evaporation,
in a wet climate you’re
heated by condensation.
Heat index is the apparent
temperature a person
feels for a given humidity.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Demo: Wet/Dry Bulb Thermometer
Pair of thermometers;
one is kept dry while
Wet bulb
the other’s bulb is
wrapped in wet cloth.
Difference of their
Dry bulb
temperatures gives Large temperature difference
relative humidity.
indicates high or low humidity?
Low humidity; evaporative
cooling is significant.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Fog & Clouds
Warm air rises. As it rises, it expands. As it expands, it
cools. As it cools, vapor molecules condense into water
droplets. This forms a cloud (or fog if warm, moist air
cools near the ground).
As vapor expands, it cools
and tiny, visible, water droplets
(liquid) condense.
Cool
Warm
17-Jul-15
Warm breath feels
cool when it expands
Water vapor
(gas) is
invisible
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Boiling
When the temperature of a liquid is high enough
that evaporation occurs everywhere, not just the
surface, then the liquid boils.
The temperature required depends on the
pressure; lower the pressure, the lower the
boiling temperature (boiling point).
17-Jul-15
Tiny bubbles grow
Physics 1 (Garcia)
dueSJSU
to evaporation
at their surface
Liquid Nitrogen
Liquid nitrogen boils at
atmospheric pressure
and room temperature.
Boiling point is -320 ºF and
freezes at -346 ºF.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Demo: Slowing Air Molecules
Air molecules slow down
and lose kinetic energy
Balloon returns to
its original state
Cool balloon using
liquid nitrogen
Balloon slowly
warms up,
restoring energy
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Demo: Low Pressure Boiling
Water boils at room
temperature if the
pressure is low.
Cooking at high altitudes
is difficult due to this
effect; coffee brewed in
the mountains always
tastes lukewarm.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Melting
Melting is the change
of phase from solid
to liquid.
Melting is a cooling
process; the solid
must absorb heat to
melt.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Sublimation
Sublimation is change of phase from solid to
gas without passing through liquid phase.
Solid carbon dioxide
(dry ice) sublimates at
a chilly -109 °F.
Put dry ice into warm water to create
dense fog of tiny water droplets.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Demo: Carbon Dioxide
Carbon dioxide, released when dry ice
sublimates, is heavier than air.
(a) Burning candle
(b) Extinguished under CO2 layer
Bubbles float on layer of dry ice.
17-Jul-15
(c) Scoop out some CO2 in a cup
(d) Pour it on candle to extinguish
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Freezing
Freezing is the opposite of melting, that is,
the change of phase from liquid to solid.
Heat must be removed from a liquid in order
to freeze it into a solid.
Lava (liquid) freezes into rock
(solid), heating the seawater.
Seawater (liquid) boils into
vapor (gas), cooling the lava.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Demo: Freeze Solid
Materials become brittle when frozen solid.
Organic materials appear solid but cells contain large amounts of liquid water.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Energy & Changes of Phase
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
Heats of Fusion & Vaporization
80 cal
Heat of
Fusion
100 cal
Heat Capacity
540 cal
Heat of
Vaporization
Heating a gram of water
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU
720 cal
Total Energy
Check Yourself
Is boiling a cooling or a warming process?
Boiling is a cooling process.
So can you cool your hand by putting it in
boiling water?
NO! Ouch!
So why is boiling a cooling process?
Because when a liquid boils it cools by itself
releasing its most energetic molecules,
just as with cooling by evaporation.
17-Jul-15
Physics 1 (Garcia) SJSU