States of Matter (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Co-ordinated Sciences (Double Award)): Revision Note

Exam code: 0654 & 0973

State changes

  • State changes occur when:

    • Solids become liquids

    • Liquids become gases

    • Gases become liquids

    • Liquids become solids

  • Each state change requires a change in the energy, arrangement and movement of the particles

The state changes

A diagram showing all of the state changes between solids, liquids and gases as well as how they relate to energy

The inter-conversions / state changes are shown in relation to energy

Melting

  • Melting is when a solid changes into a liquid

  • Requires heat energy which transforms into kinetic energy, allowing the particles to move

  • Occurs at a specific temperature known as the melting point (m.p.) 

Freezing

  • Freezing is when a liquid changes into a solid

  • This is the reverse of melting and occurs at exactly the same temperature as melting, hence the melting point and freezing point of a pure substance are the same. Water, for example, freezes and melts at 0 ºC

  • Requires a significant decrease in temperature (or loss of thermal energy) and occurs at a specific temperature 

Boiling

  • Boiling is when a liquid changes into a gas

  • Requires heat which causes bubbles of gas to form below the surface of a liquid, allowing for liquid particles to escape from the surface and within the liquid

  • Occurs at a specific temperature known as the boiling point (b.p.)

Evaporation

  • Evaporation occurs when a liquid changes into a gas and occurs over a range of temperatures

  • Evaporation occurs only at the surface of liquids where high energy particles can escape from the liquid's surface at low temperatures, below the b.p. of the liquid

  • The larger the surface area and the warmer the liquid surface, the more quickly a liquid can evaporate

Condensation

  • Condensation occurs when a gas changes into a liquid on cooling and it takes place over a range of temperatures

  • When a gas is cooled its particles lose energy and when they bump into each other they lack the energy to bounce away again, instead they group together to form a liquid

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Questions on the particle theory of matter show interconversion of states with a reversible arrow: ⇌, which means that the process can go forwards and backwards.

Read the question carefully and pick the direction of the change in state that the question refers to.

State changes & kinetic theory

Extended tier only

  • When substances are heated, the particles absorb thermal energy which is converted into kinetic energy

    • This is the basis of the kinetic theory of matter

  • Heating a solid causes its particles to vibrate more

    • As the temperature increases, the particles vibrate so much that the solid expands until the structure breaks

    • This is when the solid melts into a liquid

  • Heating a liquid causes its particles to move more and spread out

    • Some particles at the surface gain sufficient energy to overcome the intermolecular forces

    • This is when a liquid starts to evaporate

    • When the boiling point is reached, all of the particles gain enough energy to escape and the liquids boils into a gas

  • These changes in state can be shown on a graph called a heating curve:

A heating curve showing horizontal sections for when melting and boiling occur

A heating curve showing the states, state changes and temperature changes as time progresses

  • Cooling down a gas has the reverse effect and this would be called a cooling curve:

A cooling curve showing horizontal sections for when condensing and freezing occur

A cooling curve is like a heating curve, but is the mirror image

  • Heating and cooling curves are used to show how changes in temperature affect changes of state

  • The horizontal sections occur when there is a change of state but there is no change in temperature

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