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GCSE/Combined Science/OCR

C1.1The particle model: states of matter, kinetic theory, density and changes of state

Notes

The particle model in chemistry

States of matter

Three states are explained by the particle (kinetic) model: small particles in constant motion, with arrangement and forces giving each state its bulk properties.

StateSpacingArrangementMovement
SolidTouchingRegular latticeVibrate in place
LiquidTouchingRandomSlide past one another
GasFar apartRandomFast, in all directions

Limitations of the simple model

The simple "spheres in a box" picture is useful but has weaknesses you must be able to identify:

  • Treats particles as identical, solid spheres (real molecules have different shapes/sizes).
  • Ignores forces between particles.
  • Ignores the space inside an atom (electrons, nucleus).
  • Doesn't show that particles in a liquid are still attracted strongly enough to keep a fixed volume.

Changes of state

solid ⇌ liquid (melting / freezing) · liquid ⇌ gas (boiling / condensing) · solid ⇌ gas (sublimation, e.g. iodine, dry ice).

These are physical changes — no new substance forms and the change is reversible. Mass is conserved.

Energy and changes of state

Heating a solid at constant rate gives a heating curve with two flat plateaus — at the melting and boiling points — where energy goes into breaking inter-particle forces (potential energy) instead of raising temperature.

Density (links to physics)

ρ = m / V. Solids are densest because particles are touching; gases are least dense because particles are far apart.

Predicting state at a given temperature

If T < melting point → solid. If melting point < T < boiling point → liquid. If T > boiling point → gas. e.g. ethanol melts at −114°C and boils at +78°C, so at 25°C it is a liquid.

OCR exam tip

Two-mark "state and explain" questions need both halves: name the state AND link to particle behaviour. e.g. "It is a gas because the particles are far apart and move randomly with weak forces between them."

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Predict state from melting/boiling points

    OCR Paper C1 (Foundation)

    The melting point of ethanol is −114°C and its boiling point is 78°C.

    State the state of ethanol at:
    (a) 25°C (1 mark)
    (b) 100°C (1 mark)
    (c) Explain your answer to (b) in terms of particles. (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

  2. Question 23 marks

    Identify state changes

    OCR Paper C1 (Foundation)

    Name the change of state in each example:

    (a) Steam forming droplets on a cold mirror (1 mark)
    (b) Iodine crystals turning to purple vapour on warming (1 mark)
    (c) Wax solidifying as a candle cools (1 mark)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

  3. Question 32 marks

    Limitations of the particle model

    OCR Paper C1 (Higher)

    The simple particle model represents particles as identical solid spheres with no forces between them.

    State two limitations of this model. (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

Flashcards

C1.1 — The particle model: states of matter, kinetic theory, density and changes of state

7-card SR deck for OCR GCSE Combined Science — Leaves (batch 1) topic C1.1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)