Changes in state - melting and freezing
Melting
and freezing refer to the changes in state which occur when the solid
and liquid states interchange. Melting occurs when a solid is heated and
turns to a liquid and freezing occurs when a liquid is cooled and turns
to a solid.
Primary Connections has many free downloadable units you can use to teach different year levels about changes in state. In Melting Moments, Year 3 students learn about how adding and removing heat can cause a change of state between solid and liquid. In What's the Matter?, Year 5 students explore the different properties of solids, liquids, and gases and their behaviours under varied conditions. Change Detectives provides Year 6 students with hands-on opportunities to identify and explain physical and chemical changes to everyday materials.
Melting - solid to liquid
When a solid is heated, its particles gain enough energy to overcome the
bonding forces holding them firmly in place. They start to move about,
but stay close to their neighbouring particles, rolling around each other.
This particle movement allows the substance to flow and form a liquid.
Solids and liquids are similar in their density, that is, number of particles
per unit volume. They differ only in the ability of the liquid to flow
and change shape to occupy the shape of the bottom part of its container.
Melting
point of pure and impure substances
For pure substances, the temperature at which melting and freezing occurs
is quite sharp and is called the melting point of the substance. For impure
substances, melting and freezing occur more gradually over a range of
temperature. This is one way that chemists identify the purity of a substance;
a pure substance will melt at a set temperature while the more impure
a substance is, the more its melting point will vary over a range of temperatures.
Freezing
- liquid to solid
Freezing occurs when a liquid is cooled and turns to a solid. Upon cooling,
the particles in a liquid lose energy, stop moving about and settle into
a stable arrangement, forming a solid. Freezing occurs at the same temperature
as melting, hence, the melting point and freezing point of a substance
are the same temperature. The melting/freezing point of a substance is
defined as the temperature above which, the substance is liquid and below
which, it is solid.
Melting points
Different solids have different melting points depending on the strength
of bonding between the particles and the mass of the particles. Essentially,
the heavier the particles in the solid, and the stronger the bonding,
the higher the melting point.
Helium, the lightest and weakest bonded substance known, has a melting
point very near absolute zero, or - 273°C. At the other end of the
scale, Tungsten, made of much heavier particles with very strong bonding,
melts at 3410°C.
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