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The Journey of Temperature: Exploring Heating and Cooling Curves

The Journey of Temperature: Exploring Heating and Cooling Curves

Assessment

Presentation

Chemistry

9th Grade

Medium

NGSS
MS-PS1-4, HS-PS2-2, MS-PS3-4

+1

Standards-aligned

Created by

Sherri Christensen

Used 8+ times

FREE Resource

17 Slides • 20 Questions

1

The Journey of Temperature

Exploring Heating and Cooling Curves

2

The Journey of Temperature

Explore the fascinating world of heating and cooling curves. Learn about the changes in temperature as substances are heated or cooled. Discover the concepts of phase changes, specific heat, and latent heat. Dive into the intricacies of temperature transformations with this informative presentation.

3

Multiple Choice

What concepts are explored in the presentation?

1

Phase changes

2

Specific gravity

3

Boiling points

4

Latent heat

4

The Journey of Temperature

  • Heating and Cooling Curves: Explore the changes in temperature as a substance is heated or cooled.
  • Phase Changes: Learn about the transitions between solid, liquid, and gas states and the energy transfer involved.
  • Energy Transfer: Understand how heat is transferred during phase changes and its impact on temperature.

5

Multiple Choice

What is the main focus of the passage?

1

Heating and Cooling Curves

2

Phase Changes

3

Energy Transfer

4

Temperature Measurement

6

Phase Changes

Phase changes occur when a substance changes from one state to another, such as from solid to liquid or liquid to gas. During these changes, the temperature remains constant as energy is absorbed or released. Examples include melting, boiling, and condensation. Understanding phase changes is crucial in various fields, including chemistry and meteorology.

7

The Temperature Journey

  • Heating Curve: Shows how temperature changes as a substance is heated
  • Cooling Curve: Shows how temperature changes as a substance is cooled
  • Phase Changes: Plateaus on the curve indicate phase changes
  • Specific Heat: Slopes on the curve indicate changes in specific heat

8

Multiple Choice

What do plateaus on the heating and cooling curve indicate?

1

Changes in specific heat

2

Phase changes

3

Changes in temperature

4

Changes in pressure

9

Plateaus indicate phase changes

Trivia: Plateaus on the heating and cooling curve indicate a change in phase. During a phase change, the temperature remains constant as energy is used to break or form intermolecular bonds. This is why the temperature plateaus on the curve, indicating a transition between solid, liquid, or gas states.

10

Interpreting Heating Curves

By Amy Dahl

11

​It shows a plot of temperature at various times as a substance is heated.

It is notable for having two "flat spots" where the temperature remains constant even though heat continues to be added.​

A heating curve looks like this

media

12

You may not instantly know the answer

Use what you know to figure out the answer!

The "flat spots" are the key. We can use them to reason out the answer to any question having to do with heating curves.

Some text here about the topic of discussion

13

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The vertical axis is temperature.​ So the higherr the curve gets, the higher the temperature.

Temperature is a measure of particle speed. The higher the temp, the faster they move.​

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

First, notice the axes

14

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The horizontal axis is heat added (sometimes it is labeled time, but you know it is being heated the entire time).​

The farther you go to the right, the more energy has been added.​

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

First, notice the axes

15

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We expect temperature to go up when the substance is being heated.

But from B-C and D-E it doesn't!

This is because temperature does not change when the phase is changing​.

​So during flat spots, the phase is changing. Always.

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

Next, the flat spots!

16

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Use logic to determine which flat spot is which.

Phase changes that occure when something gets heated are melting and vaporization.​

You know melting occurs at a lower temp than vaporization.

Thus B-C is melting, D-E is vaporization.​

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

Which is which?

17

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This heating curve, for water, shows water's melting point of 0 oC and its boiling point of 100 oC.

Other substances have different melting and boiling points. Just read them off the temp scale.​

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

Melting and boiling points

18

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Since melting is a change from solid to liquid, before melting you have a solid, and after melting you have a liquid.

So A-B is solid and C-D is liquid.

(during B-C both solid and liquid are present).

Since A-B and C-D slope upwards, T increases and we say they are warming up!​

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

More logic

19

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Since vaporization is a change from liquid to gas, before vaporization you have a liquid, and after vaporization you have a gas (vapor).

So C-D is liqulid and E-F is gas.

(during D-E both liquid and vapor are present).

Like A-B and C-D, E-F slopes upwards, so the gas gets hotter with time and we say it is warming up.

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

Similarly

20

Let's try some!

Some text here about the topic of discussion.

21

Multiple Choice

Question image
Describe the substance between letters C and D. 
1
Gas
2
Liquid
3
Melting
4

Vaporizing

22

Multiple Choice

Question image
Between which points is the temperature of the substance remaining constant?
1
A-B only. 
2
A-B, C-D, E-F
3
B-C only. 
4
B-C, D-E

23

Multiple Choice

True or false: melting and freezing occur at the same temperature.
1
True
2
False

24

Multiple Choice

Question image
Describe the substance between letters A and B. 
1
Solid
2
Liquid
3
Melting
4

Vaporizing

25

Multiple Choice

Question image
Describe what is happening between letters D and E. 
1
Gas
2
Liquid
3
Melting
4

Vaporizing

26

Multiple Choice

Question image
Describe the substance between letters E and F. 
1
Gas
2
Liquid
3
Melting
4

Vaporizing

27

Multiple Choice

Question image
What is the melting point for this substance?
1
60 °C
2
40 °C
3
80 °C
4
100 °C

28

Multiple Choice

Question image
What is the freezing point for this substance?
1
60 °C
2
40 °C
3
80 °C
4
100 °C

29

Multiple Choice

Question image
What is the boiling point for this substance?
1
60 °C
2
40 °C
3
120 °C
4
100 °C

30

Multiple Choice

Question image
What line segment represents only the solid state?
1
A-B
2
B-C
3
C-D
4
D-E

31

Multiple Choice

Question image

In which segment is the particle speed remaining constant?

1
A-B
2
B-C
3
C-D
4
E-F

32

Multiple Choice

Question image
What state(s) of matter are present at D-E?
1
Solid-liquid
2
Liquid
3
Liquid-gas
4
Gas-Solid

33

Multiple Choice

Question image
A substance's heating curve is shown in the graph.  What is its boiling point?
1
100 C
2
60 C
3
80 C
4
20 C

34

Multiple Choice

Which of the following terms identifies the change from a liquid to gas?
1
Vaporization
2
Condensation
3
Deposition
4
Sublimation

35

Multiple Choice

When the temperature of matter increases the particles...
1
speed up and move closer
2
speed up and move farther apart
3
slow down and move closer together
4
slow down and move farther apart

36

Multiple Choice

Question image

From point A to point E, the sample is going through an

1

exothermic process by releasing heat to the surroundings

2

exothermic process by absorbing heat from the surroundings

3

endothermic process by releasing heat to the surroundings

4

endothermic process by absorbing heat from the surroundings

37

Multiple Choice

Question image

The melting point of the sample is

1

-60 ºC

2

-100 ºC

3

60 ºC

4

100 ºC

The Journey of Temperature

Exploring Heating and Cooling Curves

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