1.4: States of Matter - Solid, Liquid, and Gas
- To describe the solid, liquid and gas phases.
Water can take many forms. At low temperatures (below \(0^\text{o} \text{C}\)), it is a solid. Between \(0^\text{o} \text{C}\) and \(100^\text{o} \text{C}\)), it is a liquid. At temperatures above \(100^\text{o} \text{C}\), water is a gas (steam). The state that water is in depends upon the temperature, each state has its own unique set of physical properties. Matter typically exists in one of three states: solid , liquid , or gas .
The state that a given substance exhibits is also a physical property. Some substances exist as gases at room temperature such as oxygen and carbon dioxide. Others, like water and mercury metal, exist as liquids at room temperature. Most metals exist as solids at room temperature. Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\) shows the differences among solids, liquids, and gases at the molecular level. A solid has definite volume and shape, a liquid has a definite volume but no definite shape, and a gas has neither a definite volume nor shape.
Technically speaking, a fourth state of matter called plasma exists. However, it does not naturally occur on earth. So we will omit it from our study here.
A plasma globe operating in a darkened room. (CC BY-SA 3.0; Chocolateoak).
Solids
In the solid state, the individual particles of a substance are in fixed positions with respect to each other because there is not enough thermal energy to overcome the intermolecular interactions between the particles. As a result, solids have a definite shape and volume. Most solids are hard, but some (like waxes) are relatively soft. Many solids composed of ions can also be quite brittle.
Solids are defined by the following characteristics:
- Definite shape (rigid)
- Definite volume
- Particles vibrate around fixed axes
If we were to cool liquid mercury to its freezing point of \(-39^\text{o} \text{C}\) under the right pressure conditions, we would notice all of the liquid particles would go into the solid state. Mercury can be solidified when its temperature is brought to its freezing point. However, when returned to room temperature conditions, mercury does not exist in solid state for long, and returns back to its more common liquid form.
Solids usually have their constituent particles arranged in a regular, three-dimensional array of alternating positive and negative ions called a crystal . The effect of this regular arrangement of particles is sometimes visible macroscopically, as shown in Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\). Some solids, especially those composed of large molecules, cannot easily organize their particles in such regular crystals and exist as amorphous (literally, “without form”) solids. Glass is one example of an amorphous solid.
Liquids
If the particles of a substance have enough energy to partially overcome intermolecular interactions, then the particles can move about each other while remaining in contact. This describes the liquid state. In a liquid, the particles are still in close contact, so liquids have a definite volume. However, because the particles can move about each other rather freely, a liquid has no definite shape and instead takes a shape dictated by its container.
Liquids have the following characteristics:
- No definite shape (takes the shape of its container)
- Has definite volume
- Particles are free to move over each other, but are still attracted to each other
A familiar liquid is mercury metal. Mercury is an anomaly. It is the only metal we know of that is liquid at room temperature.
Gases
If the particles of a substance have enough energy to completely overcome intermolecular interactions, then the particles can separate from each other and move about randomly in space. This describes the gas state, which we will consider in more detail in a later chapter. Like liquids, gases have no definite shape, but unlike solids and liquids, gases have no definite volume. The change from solid to liquid usually does not significantly change the volume of a substance. However, the change from a liquid to a gas significantly increases the volume of a substance, by a factor of 1,000 or more. Gases have the following characteristics:
- No definite shape (takes the shape of its container)
- No definite volume
- Particles move in random motion with little or no attraction to each other
- Highly compressible
| Characteristics | Solids | Liquids | Gases |
|---|---|---|---|
| shape | definite | indefinite | indefinite |
| volume | definite | definite | indefinite |
| relative intermolecular interaction strength | strong | moderate | weak |
| relative particle positions | in contact and fixed in place | in contact but not fixed | not in contact, random positions |
What state or states of matter does each statement describe?
- This state has a definite volume, but no definite shape.
- This state has no definite volume.
- This state allows the individual particles to move about while remaining in contact.
Solution
- This statement describes the liquid state.
- This statement describes the gas state.
- This statement describes the liquid state.
What state or states of matter does each statement describe?
- This state has individual particles in a fixed position with regard to each other.
- This state has individual particles far apart from each other in space.
- This state has a definite shape.
- Answer a:
- solid
- Answer b:
- gas
- Answer c:
- solid
Summary
- Three states of matter exist - solid, liquid, and gas.
- Solids have a definite shape and volume.
- Liquids have a definite volume, but take the shape of the container.
- Gases have no definite shape or volume
Contributions & Attributions
This page was constructed from content via the following contributor(s) and edited (topically or extensively) by the LibreTexts development team to meet platform style, presentation, and quality:
-
Henry Agnew (UC Davis)