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GCSE/Combined Science/AQA

P3.1Changes of state and the particle model: density of materials and physical state changes

Notes

Changes of State and the Particle Model (P3.1)

The particle model

All matter is made of particles (atoms, molecules, ions). The arrangement and movement of these particles explains macroscopic properties.

StateArrangementMovementProperties
SolidClose, regular, fixedVibrate in placeFixed shape, fixed volume, incompressible
LiquidClose, randomSlide past each otherFixed volume, no fixed shape, incompressible
GasFar apart, randomMove rapidly in all directionsNo fixed shape, no fixed volume, compressible

Changes of state

ChangeNameEnergy change
Solid → LiquidMeltingEnergy absorbed (endothermic)
Liquid → SolidFreezing/solidifyingEnergy released (exothermic)
Liquid → GasBoiling/evaporationEnergy absorbed (endothermic)
Gas → LiquidCondensationEnergy released (exothermic)
Solid → GasSublimationEnergy absorbed
Gas → SolidDepositionEnergy released

During a change of state: temperature remains CONSTANT — all energy goes into breaking (or forming) intermolecular bonds, not into increasing kinetic energy. This is latent heat.

Density

density (ρ) = mass (m) / volume (V)

Units: kg/m³ or g/cm³. 1 g/cm³ = 1,000 kg/m³.

Worked example: A block of wood has mass 800 g and volume 1,000 cm³. ρ = 800/1000 = 0.8 g/cm³. Will it float? (water is 1.0 g/cm³) Yes — it is less dense.

Objects float if their density is less than the fluid they are in.

Measuring density

  • Regular solid: measure dimensions with ruler; calculate volume (V = l×w×h); mass with balance.
  • Irregular solid: mass with balance; immerse in water in measuring cylinder; volume = rise in water level.
  • Liquid: pour known volume into measuring cylinder; mass with balance.

Gas density vs solid/liquid

Gases are much less dense than solids/liquids — particles are far apart. Gas density changes significantly with temperature and pressure.

Common exam errors

  1. Saying temperature rises continuously during melting — it stays constant at the melting point.
  2. Mixing up boiling and evaporation: boiling occurs at a fixed temperature throughout the liquid; evaporation happens at the surface at any temperature below the boiling point.
  3. Using the wrong units for density — always check that mass and volume units are compatible.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Density calculation

    (a) A metal block has a mass of 270 g and volume of 100 cm³. Calculate its density. [2]
    (b) Identify the metal if: aluminium = 2.7 g/cm³, copper = 8.9 g/cm³, iron = 7.9 g/cm³. [1]
    (c) Convert 2.7 g/cm³ to kg/m³. [1]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  2. Question 24 marks

    Change of state and temperature

    A substance is heated from −20°C to 120°C. Its temperature-time graph shows two flat regions.

    (a) What do the flat regions represent? [2]
    (b) Explain in terms of particles why the temperature does not rise during these regions. [2]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  3. Question 34 marks

    Particle model for states of matter

    Explain, in terms of particles, why:
    (a) Gases are much less dense than liquids. [2]
    (b) Solids have a fixed shape but liquids do not. [2]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  4. Question 45 marks

    Density of irregular solid

    Describe an experiment to measure the density of an irregularly shaped pebble. [5]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Flashcards

P3.1 — Changes of state and the particle model: density of materials and physical state changes

8-card SR deck for AQA Combined Science topic P3.1

8 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)