The Three States of Matter (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Richard Boole

Expertise

Chemistry

The Three States of Matter

States of matter

  • The three states of matter are solids, liquids and gases

  • The particles for each state of matter are arranged and move differently

Solids

  • Solids have a fixed volume and shape

  • They have a high density

  • The atoms vibrate in position but can’t change location

  • The particles are tightly packed in a fixed and regular pattern

Liquids

  • Liquids also have a fixed volume but adopt the shape of the container

  • They are generally less dense than solids (an exception is water), but much denser than gases

  • The particles move and slide past each other which is why liquids adopt the shape of the container and also why they can flow freely

Gases 

  • Gases do not have a fixed volume, and, like liquids, take up the shape of the container

  • Gases have a very low density

  • Since there is a lot of space between the particles, gases can be compressed into a much smaller volume

  • The particles are far apart and move randomly and quickly (around 500 m/s) in all directions

Summary of the Properties of Solids, Liquids and Gases

SOLID

LIQUID

GAS

Diagram

Diagram showing the regular arrangement of a solid in rows and columns
Diagram showing how the particles in a liquid are arranged randomly and close together but not all touching
Diagram showing how the particles in a  gas are far apart and moving quickly and randomly

Arrangement of particles

Regular arrangement

Randomly arranged

Randomly arranged

Movement of particles

Vibrate about a fixed position

Move around each other

Move quickly in all directions

Closeness of particles

Very close

Close

Far apart

Inter-conversion processes

  • Inter-conversion processes are more commonly known as state changes

Interconversion of solids, liquids and gases

A diagram showing all of the inter-conversions / 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
  • Each state change requires a change in the energy, arrangement and movement of the particles

Melting

  • Melting is when a solid changes into a liquid

  • Heat / thermal energy absorbed by the particles is transformed into kinetic energy

  • This causes the particles to vibrate more and start to move / flow

  • Melting happens 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 the same temperature as melting

    • So, the melting point and freezing point of a pure substance are the same

    • For example, water freezes and melts at 0 ºC

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

Boiling

  • Boiling and evaporation are both when a liquid changes into a gas

    • However, there is a key difference between boiling and evaporation

  • In boiling, heat / thermal energy causes bubbles of gas to form inside the liquid, allowing for liquid particles to escape from the surface and within the liquid

  • Boiling happens at a specific temperature, known as the boiling point (b.p.)

Evaporation

  • Evaporation occurs over a range of temperatures

    • It can happen at temperatures below the boiling point of the liquid

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

  • 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 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

Sublimation

  • Sublimation occurs when a solid changes directly into a gas

  • This only happens to a few solids, such as iodine or solid carbon dioxide

  • The reverse reaction also happens and is called desublimation or deposition

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Richard Boole

Author: Richard Boole

Richard has taught Chemistry for over 15 years as well as working as a science tutor, examiner, content creator and author. He wasn’t the greatest at exams and only discovered how to revise in his final year at university. That knowledge made him want to help students learn how to revise, challenge them to think about what they actually know and hopefully succeed; so here he is, happily, at SME.