Wikijunior:Particles/Three states of matter
Appearance
This chapter, as mentioned in the previous, is about using the particle model to explain the three states of matter.
To explain the three states
[edit | edit source]To explain the properties of each of the states
[edit | edit source]State | Model(s) | Flexibility of shape | Compressibility |
---|---|---|---|
Solid | Solids have a fixed shape; their shape cannot be altered. | Solids have a fixed volume; you cannot compress them. | |
Liquid | Liquids do not have fixed shapes. As you can see, the shape can alter depending on the shape of the container. | Liquids have a fixed volume. You can see from the model that there are the same number of liquid particles and that the size of the particles are the same. | |
Gas | Gas particles do not have a fixed shape so you can safely bend them and they won't even break. In the model, the shape of the particles changed from the shape of a square and the shape of a triangle. | Gas particles are perfectly compressible, as opposed to the above two. That means you can press it and it will actually become smaller. Then if you put them in a really big container, it will spread all around the container, through diffusion. Note that the triangle here is a lot smaller than the square. |
Quiz
[edit | edit source]- Briefly explain, in your own words, the different properties of the three states of matter and arrangement and movement of their particles.
- Go to the library or search the Internet about 'plasma' the 'fourth' state of matter, and write about 200 words about it.
Answers will vary.