GCSE Chemistry - States of Matter & Changing State #21
Cognito・4 minutes read
Solids have strong forces of attraction with fixed particles, heating leads to melting into liquids. Liquids with weak forces of attraction have particles moving randomly, heating turns them into gases.
Insights
- Solids have particles with strong forces of attraction, leading to a fixed lattice structure, while liquids exhibit weaker forces that allow particles to move but maintain volume.
- Heating solids and liquids weakens forces of attraction, transitioning solids to liquids and liquids to gases as particles gain energy and move more freely.
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Recent questions
What are the three states of matter?
Solid, liquid, gas
How does heating a solid affect its particles?
Particles vibrate more, weakening forces
What happens to a liquid when it is heated?
Particles move faster, weakening forces
How do particles behave in a gas?
Move freely and fill any container
What determines the state of matter?
Forces of attraction between particles
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