All Physical Chemistry Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Phases And Properties Of Matter
Why is liquid water more dense than ice?
Water has metastable phases
Water crystalizes with greater average space between molecules
None of these
Liquid water and solid ice have the same density
The slope of the solid/liquid phase line for water is positive
Water crystalizes with greater average space between molecules
While water exhibits hydrogen bonding and has metastable phases, these don't have anything to do with the density of water. The slope of the solid/liquid line is in fact negative. This tells something about the relative densities of the phases. For a phase diagram, moving along a line of constant temperature (vertically on a phase diagram tells us something about the densities. Moving up along the line indicates an increase in density (this makes sense, since gasses are the least dense, and occupy the bottom portion of a phase diagram). If you move along a constant temperature line, you will see that water has a higher density than ice, since the ordering goes vapor, ice, then water. This is a result of the packing in solid ice.
Example Question #1 : Phase Interfaces And Surfaces
Which of the follow are false?
I. Three phases can coexist at the triple point.
II. It is not possible for ice to transition directly to water vapor without become a liquid first.
III. The slope of the ice/water phase curve is positive
IV. Distinct phases are not achievable above the critical point
IV only
III and IV
I only
II and III
II and IV
II and III
Condition I is true. The only place three phases can coexist is at the triple point.
Condition II is false. Water in fact can undergo deposition and move from the solid phase to the gas phase directly. This occurs at pressures below 0.006atm.
Condition III is false. A peculiar fact of the water phase diagram is the slope of the solid/liquid line. For most phase diagrams, the slope is sharply positive, but that of water is negative.
Condition IV is true. No distinct phases exist above the critical point.