Properties of Materials Flashcards

1
Q

Physical properties of a typical solid

A

The particles are very close together. This gives it a high density and makes it incompressible.

The particles vibrate about a fixed point and can’t move about freely

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2
Q

Physical properties of a typical liquid

A

Has a similar density to a solid and is virtually incompressible.

The particles move about freely and randomly within the liquid, allowing it to flow

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3
Q

Physical properties of a typical gas

A

The particles have loads more energy and are much further apart.

So the density is generally pretty low and it’s very compressible.

The particles move about freely, with not a lot of attraction between them, so they’ll quickly diffuse to fill a container

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4
Q

Explain how you change from a solid to a liquid or a liquid to a gas

A

You need to break the forces that are holding the particles together.

To do this you need to give the particles more energy (eg by heating them)

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5
Q

Explain what you have to do to melt or boil a simple covalent compound

Why do simple covalent compounds have relatively low melting and boiling points

A

You only have to overcome the intermolecular forces that hold the molecules together.

You don’t need to break the much stronger covalent bonds that hold the atoms together in the molecules

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6
Q

Explain how you’d turn diamond atoms into a liquid or a gas

A

You have to break the covalent bonds between the atoms

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7
Q

What determines the melting and boiling points of a substance?

A

The strength of the attraction between its particles

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8
Q

When will a substance only conduct electricity?

A

If it contains charged particles that are free to move

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9
Q

What does the solubility of a substance depend on?

Describe water as an example

A

The type of particles that it contains.

Water is a polar solvent, so substances that are polar or charged will dissolve in it well, whereas non-polar or uncharged substances won’t

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10
Q

Properties of Ionic Substance

A

High melting and boiling points

Solid at room temperature and pressure

Doesn’t conduct electricity when solid (ions are held in place)

Conducts electricity when liquid (ions are free to move)

Soluble in water

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11
Q

Properties of Simple Molecular Substance

A

Low melting and boiling points (involves breaking intermolecular forces but not covalent bonds).

May be solid at room temperature and pressure (eg I2) but usually liquid or gas.

Doesn’t conduct electricity when solid or liquid.

Soluble in water: depends on how polarised the molecule is

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12
Q

Properties of Macromolecular Substance

A

High melting and boiling points

Solid at room temperature and pressure

Doesn’t conduct electricity when solid (except graphite)

Doesn’t conduct electricity when liquid (sublimes rather than melting)

Insoluble in water

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13
Q

Properties of Metallic Substance

A

High melting and boiling points

Solid at room temperature and pressure

Conducts electricity when solid (due to delocalised electrons)

Conducts electricity when liquid (due to delocalised electrons)

Insoluble in water

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