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Topic 3 Particle Model - AQA Physics GCSE

Page 2: Density and Changes of State

  • Density is defined as mass per unit volume

    • Density = mass/volume (ρ = m/V)

  • Density depends on the spacing of atoms in matter

    • Solids and liquids have similar densities

      • Liquids usually have lower density than solids, except for ice and water

    • Gases have a much lower density

  • Mass is conserved during a change of state

    • If 20g of liquid evaporates, the gas produced will also weigh 20g

  • Changes of state are physical changes, not chemical changes

    • The material retains its original properties when reversed

  • Changes of state require the substance to be at the right temperature

Page 3: Internal Energy, Heating a System, Temperature Changes

  • Internal energy is the energy stored by particles within a system

    • It includes kinetic energy and potential energy

  • Heating a system increases the energy of the particles, increasing internal energy

    • This can raise the temperature or cause a change of state

  • Specific heat capacity is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1°C

    • Change in thermal energy = mass × specific heat capacity × temperature change (∆E = mc∆T)

  • Specific latent heat is the amount of energy needed to change the state of 1kg of a substance without a change in temperature

    • Energy for a change of state = mass × specific latent heat (E = mL)

  • Energy is absorbed during melting and evaporating, and released during freezing and condensing

  • Sublimation is when a solid goes straight to gas

Page 4: Pressure in Gases

  • Gas pressure is the force exerted by gas molecules on the walls of their container

  • Temperature is related to the average kinetic energy of gas molecules

    • Higher temperature means greater average kinetic energy and faster average speed of molecules

  • Changing the volume of a gas affects the pressure

    • Increasing volume leads to a decrease in pressure (Boyle's law)

  • Pressure and volume are inversely proportional for a fixed mass and temperature

    • P1V1 = P2V2

  • Doing work on a gas increases its temperature

  • Adding more particles to a fixed volume increases pressure and temperature

  • A fixed number of particles in a smaller volume increases pressure and temperature

Page 5: Additional Information

  • PMT Education is a resource for tuition courses

  • The transcript is from www.pmt

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Topic 3 Particle Model - AQA Physics GCSE

Page 2: Density and Changes of State

  • Density is defined as mass per unit volume

    • Density = mass/volume (ρ = m/V)

  • Density depends on the spacing of atoms in matter

    • Solids and liquids have similar densities

      • Liquids usually have lower density than solids, except for ice and water

    • Gases have a much lower density

  • Mass is conserved during a change of state

    • If 20g of liquid evaporates, the gas produced will also weigh 20g

  • Changes of state are physical changes, not chemical changes

    • The material retains its original properties when reversed

  • Changes of state require the substance to be at the right temperature

Page 3: Internal Energy, Heating a System, Temperature Changes

  • Internal energy is the energy stored by particles within a system

    • It includes kinetic energy and potential energy

  • Heating a system increases the energy of the particles, increasing internal energy

    • This can raise the temperature or cause a change of state

  • Specific heat capacity is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1°C

    • Change in thermal energy = mass × specific heat capacity × temperature change (∆E = mc∆T)

  • Specific latent heat is the amount of energy needed to change the state of 1kg of a substance without a change in temperature

    • Energy for a change of state = mass × specific latent heat (E = mL)

  • Energy is absorbed during melting and evaporating, and released during freezing and condensing

  • Sublimation is when a solid goes straight to gas

Page 4: Pressure in Gases

  • Gas pressure is the force exerted by gas molecules on the walls of their container

  • Temperature is related to the average kinetic energy of gas molecules

    • Higher temperature means greater average kinetic energy and faster average speed of molecules

  • Changing the volume of a gas affects the pressure

    • Increasing volume leads to a decrease in pressure (Boyle's law)

  • Pressure and volume are inversely proportional for a fixed mass and temperature

    • P1V1 = P2V2

  • Doing work on a gas increases its temperature

  • Adding more particles to a fixed volume increases pressure and temperature

  • A fixed number of particles in a smaller volume increases pressure and temperature

Page 5: Additional Information

  • PMT Education is a resource for tuition courses

  • The transcript is from www.pmt