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GCSE/Combined Science/Edexcel

CC1.1States of matter and the particle model; physical changes

Notes

CC1.1 — States of matter (Edexcel 1SC0)

Particle model

All matter consists of tiny particles. The three states of matter differ in how particles are arranged and how much energy they have.

StateArrangementMotionEnergy
SolidRegular lattice; close togetherVibrate around fixed positionsLow
LiquidRandom; close togetherMove around each otherMedium
GasRandom; far apartMove rapidly in all directionsHigh

Changes of state

  • Melting (solid → liquid): particles gain energy; overcome lattice forces.
  • Boiling (liquid → gas): particles gain enough energy to escape liquid surface.
  • Freezing (liquid → solid): particles lose energy.
  • Condensation (gas → liquid): particles lose energy.
  • Sublimation (solid → gas directly): e.g. iodine, dry ice (CO₂).

Changes of state are physical changes — no new substances are formed; the change is reversible.

Limitations of the particle model

The particle model treats particles as solid spheres with no forces between them — useful but simplified. In reality, particles have intermolecular forces and are not rigid spheres.

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

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    States of matter properties

    (4 marks) Give two properties of a liquid that are different from a solid, and explain each in terms of particles.

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

  2. Question 22 marks

    Sublimation

    (2 marks) Define sublimation and give one example of a substance that undergoes it.

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

Flashcards

CC1.1 — States of matter and the particle model

4-card SR deck for Edexcel Combined Science topic CC1.1

4 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)