Chemistry, Third edition

(Wang) #1

Gases, Liquids and Solids


Objectives


Defines heat and temperature


Looks at changes of state


Introduces the kinetic molecular theory of matter


Discusses the gas laws and the idea of vapour pressure


Shows how to use the ideal gas equation in calculations


Although people have always recognized the distinction between liquids and solids,


the idea of a gas as we know it today only began to develop in the 1760s. The absence


of such a concept severely hindered chemists in their attempt to make sense of the


burning of fuels and of the tarnishing of metals in air, both of which we now know to


be chemical reactions involving gaseous oxygen.


Heat and temperature


The hotness or coldness of an object is measured by its temperature(Box 10.1). If we


make an object hot, we have transferred energy to that object. This energy is called


heat.


Changes in the state of matter


Everyday observations show that solids have a definite shape and volume. Liquids


possess the shape of their container but their volume is fixed and does not depend


upon the volume of their container. Gases take up the shape and volume of their


container (Fig. 10.2(a)).


Kinetic molecular theory of matter


The idea that matter consists of moving particles (molecules, atoms or ions) is


the basis of the kinetic molecular theory(or simply, kinetic theory). Its two main


assumptions are:


10.2


10.1


Contents


10.1Heat and
temperature 153

10.2Changes in the state
of matter 153

10.3Gas laws 157

10.4Kinetic molecular
theory of gases 161

10.5Ideal gas equation 162

10.6Adsorption of gases
on solids 164

10.7Vapour pressure 165

10.8Critical temperature
and pressure 168

10.8Revision questions 169

10


UNIT

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