Particles in solids, liquids and gases
Spacing and freedom increase from solid to liquid to gas.
Solid.
- Particles in a regular, repeating pattern (lattice).
- Vibrate about FIXED positions; cannot move past each other.
- Strong forces between particles.
- Fixed shape AND volume.
Liquid.
- Particles still close together but in NO regular pattern.
- Move past each other freely (slide / flow).
- Weaker forces than in a solid.
- Fixed volume; takes the shape of its container.
Gas.
- Particles far apart (about liquid spacing).
- Move quickly in random directions.
- Almost no forces between particles.
- No fixed shape OR volume β fills its container completely.
Cambridge tip. When asked to describe the particles in a state, mention BOTH arrangement AND motion. Many students lose marks by giving only one.
Worked qualitative. A liquid is heated from to . What happens to the particles?
- They gain kinetic energy.
- They move faster.
- They overcome more of the intermolecular forces.
- The liquid expands slightly (particles take up more average space).
- Solid: regular lattice, fixed positions.
- Liquid: close but flowing.
- Gas: far apart, fast, random.
- Always state arrangement AND motion.