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Physics: Phase Changes on a Molecular Level 12 Views
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Description:
Let's look at phase changes on a molecular level. Get your miniaturizing ray guns ready.
Transcript
- 00:02
Phase changes on a molecular level let's get particular....
- 00:25
sawing a woman in half is so cliche and [Magician sawing woman in half]
- 00:30
all that is this your card stuff, i'd leave it for the hacks in Vegas nope my
- 00:36
tricks are way better sure maybe they take a little more time maybe but all
- 00:41
good art does so for my next trick I'm gonna make this solid block of ice into [Magician with big block of ice]
Full Transcript
- 00:47
liquid okay so maybe watching ice melt isn't your idea of magic
- 00:51
maybe reminds you of Mrs. Chimel Farbs grammar class but underneath it all on a
- 00:56
molecular level well some pretty crazy stuff is happening phase transitions
- 01:02
really are kind of magical by which I mean most people don't really understand [People sleeping in the audience]
- 01:07
what's happening and there are things going on that your eyes can't see... Take
- 01:11
this big block of ice for example it looks well a lot like ice cold solid
- 01:17
boring ice just sitting there not moving but inside the ice like way inside
- 01:23
everything is moving if we were able to look at the molecules in this ice cube [Molecules moving]
- 01:28
well we'd see a whole lot of buzzing going on the molecules would be packed
- 01:32
together in an orderly fashion kind of like fans at a football stadium but
- 01:36
excited fans who are all vibrating like Packer fans and if you give the ice cube
- 01:41
a little heat well all they might all do the wave....
- 01:46
and as the IceCube receives heat from the air around it well, the molecules [Molecules vibrate]
- 01:51
start to vibrate more and more it's like when the home team is making a
- 01:54
last-minute drive for the winning touchdown and you know what let's keep
- 01:59
this metaphor going once the frozen water has gotten enough heat and has hit
- 02:04
a specific temperature it's like the home team just caught a Hail Mary pass [Man catches football in end zone]
- 02:08
The bonds that we're keeping the molecules tightly bound to each other
- 02:12
are broken and the molecules are able to slip past each other and move around
- 02:16
more freely like fans storming the field the molecules are still contained in the [Molecules run onto football field]
- 02:22
stadium but they're moving past each other under each other just to go nuts
- 02:26
and here's where the whole fans at a football stadium game thing well it kind
- 02:30
of breaks down see when you heat up a solid it gets hotter meaning its
- 02:34
temperature gets higher makes sense right but when it starts to melt its
- 02:38
temperature stops increasing every substance has a melting point even the [Fire burning metal]
- 02:44
Grinch's heart... Once the temperature hits that magical melting point, things
- 02:48
start to get runny but that process doesn't happen all at once an ice cube
- 02:53
doesn't just turn into liquid water in an instant it melts gradually and the
- 02:58
part that still solid stays at the same temperature even though it continues to
- 03:03
take in heat all the heat that's taken in just makes things melt more quickly [Snow melting on the ground]
- 03:07
the amount of heat that it takes to turn an entire solid liquid without changing
- 03:13
its temperature is called the heat of fusion and we're not using fusion in the
- 03:18
nuclear sense here people which is good because if it was a nuclear reaction [Magician with ice cube and ice cube explodes]
- 03:22
every time an ice cube melted well we'd be in trouble you can look at the
- 03:27
ancient Latins for this one the original root word for fusion is Fundere...
- 03:32
which means to melt or to pour and we know how much science loves it's
- 03:38
dead languages so of course well they kick it old-school with the original
- 03:42
meaning scientists are the worst right? like why can't they be cool and hip like
- 03:47
magicians okay so now we've got ourselves a puddle [Magician with a puddle on stage]
- 03:52
a magic puddle that is but the show doesn't end there my friends oh no
- 03:56
there's plenty more magic where that came from because once again with just
- 03:59
the power of heat I can make this puddle disappear into thin air in fact I can
- 04:04
make it vaporize yeah vaporization evaporation
- 04:08
whatever you want to call it when a substance reaches its boiling point it [Water boiling in a pan]
- 04:11
stops being liquid and it becomes a gas now of course water doesn't need to get
- 04:15
up to 212 degrees Fahrenheit to evaporate the individual molecules are
- 04:20
able to get enough energy to turn into gas even at room temperature I prove
- 04:26
that every night with a magic trick I like to call pop-sweat yeah but adding
- 04:30
heat guarantees a gas state when we keep adding heat to our liquid water well,
- 04:35
the molecules keep moving faster and faster but they're still bonded together [Molecules moving]
- 04:39
they can't bounce themselves completely free at least not yet
- 04:43
which is why liquids maintain their volume if you take a gallon of water and
- 04:47
poured into a kiddy pool you're still gonna have a gallon of water and you're
- 04:52
also gonna have a really lame pool party well the water isn't going to expand and
- 04:57
somehow fill the pool liquids maintain their density and they also can't be
- 05:01
compressed that compression thing is important to imagine you have a tube of
- 05:06
water it's closed on one end and open on the other and you've got some sort of [Man with a tube of water]
- 05:11
plunger mechanism you know like how a syringe works try as you might you're
- 05:15
not gonna be able to press down on that plunger to make the water take up less
- 05:18
space which is a good thing because that's how the brakes on your car work a
- 05:22
squirrel with a death wish runs out into the street you mash the brake pedal and
- 05:26
the pressure from your foot is delivered via break fluid to the wheels [Car brakes rapidly]
- 05:31
and sure that's simplifying things a bit but I'm a magician not a car explainer
- 05:36
guy all right well where were we oh yeah doing my magic aquatic disappearing
- 05:40
trick by which I mean boiling water and the molecules were starting to go
- 05:45
bonkers the water gets hotter and hotter and finally reaches its boiling point
- 05:49
when boiling starts the molecules have enough energy to break the bonds holding
- 05:53
them together and they're finally free able to move around completely
- 05:56
independent of each other because they've transition to become a
- 05:59
gas just like when a solid starts to melt when a liquid starts to turn into [Magician holding pan of water]
- 06:04
gas the liquid stays at the same temperature even though it continues to
- 06:07
take on heat well the extra energy allows the molecules to break free
- 06:10
by definition water above 100 degrees Celsius becomes vapor so if it's liquid
- 06:16
it can't be hotter than that right only when all liquid has been converted to
- 06:20
gas can the thermometers start going up again and this amount of heat required
- 06:25
to turn a liquid into gas is called the heat of vaporization now for the second [Magician holding act 2 sign]
- 06:31
part of my act I'm gonna reverse all of this magic and turn this vapor back into
- 06:35
a solid quick question though how good is the air conditioning here hmm see
- 06:41
we're gonna need to get things cold enough that all the water we heated up
- 06:45
now has to give up heat to the system around it the temperature where a gas
- 06:50
turns into a liquid is called the condensation point and that temperature
- 06:54
is exactly the same as the boiling point for whatever substance we're talking
- 06:58
about well the process just works the other way around instead of heat going [Molecules appear]
- 07:02
into this substance getting these molecules all jazzed up heat comes out
- 07:07
of the substance think about a pot of boiling water the lid of the pot will
- 07:11
have a lot of water condensed on it and that's because the lid is cooler than
- 07:14
the water so when the water vapor comes into contact it cools down suddenly and
- 07:18
cools down enough to turn back into a liquid and you might have a couple of [Magician holding an ice cube tray]
- 07:23
trays like these in your freezer right when you've used the last ice cube and
- 07:27
you don't want to get yelled after leaving an empty ice tray in the freezer
- 07:30
well you fill it up with liquid water and pop it back in the water has a
- 07:35
higher temperature than the air surrounding it so it starts giving off
- 07:38
heat but once the waters temperature reaches the freezing point which fyi
- 07:42
is the same as the melting point well those molecules start to get back in
- 07:47
line and just like before the water can't get [Ice cube tray in a freezer]
- 07:50
colder than the freezing point until all of it has been converted to a solid
- 07:55
abracadabra what once was wet now is dry all thanks to my magic and physics but
- 08:02
you know mostly my magic well there's one other state of matter which we
- 08:06
haven't talked about yet and we know if we give a solid enough heat it'll
- 08:10
eventually change into a gas but what happens if we keep heating that gas up
- 08:14
does it just stay gassy no as things get hotter and hotter the molecules get more
- 08:21
and more worked up eventually there's so much energy that electrons start popping
- 08:26
off their atoms creating electrically charged molecules called ions this [ions appear beside water molecules]
- 08:32
ionized gas becomes the fourth state of matter called plasma plasma is what
- 08:38
stars are mostly made up of and we use it on earth for things like welding
- 08:42
making computer chips and most importantly yes TVs yep this odd state
- 08:48
of matter is responsible for delivering sweet mind-numbing reality entertainment [Woman flicking through TV channels]
- 08:53
right into our brains and although we don't run into it very often here on
- 08:57
earth almost all of the matter in the universe is actually plasma but we can't
- 09:02
really make plasma on our kitchen stove so we're not gonna get too deep into
- 09:06
that right now well one thing that might seem like
- 09:09
magic is how all these different states of matter can exist at the same
- 09:14
temperature when it's 72 degrees outside water is liquid oxygen is gas and pizza
- 09:19
is solid how is that possible people everything is made up of the same
- 09:23
building blocks right? well yes and no different substances have different
- 09:28
chemical properties some molecules have electrons that aren't too attached to [Electron spinning round orbital of molecule]
- 09:32
them so energy is able to flow more easily between those molecules and the
- 09:35
shape size and mass of the molecules all affect how it reacts to heat and how it
- 09:41
changes phases well polarity also matters polarity is
- 09:46
when one side of a molecule has more electrons creating a partial electrical
- 09:50
charge and pressure can change boiling and melting points too.. generally speaking
- 09:55
if pressure increases so does the melting and boiling point and if we
- 09:59
lower pressure and a substance will melt and boil at a lower temperature too.. All of
- 10:05
these factors combine to make the wonderful diverse universe we live in
- 10:08
everything looks a little more magical now doesn't it we can graph all these [A field and pool appear]
- 10:13
phase changes too - take a look at this graph this is a heat curve for water
- 10:18
okay it's not the sexiest of curves heat curve is a more of a name rather than a [Magician discussing heat curve graphs]
- 10:23
description there all right well we've got temperature on the y-axis and heat
- 10:28
on the x-axis yeah not time which is different than a lot of graphs that
- 10:31
we've worked on before usually the x-axis is time right but we don't care
- 10:35
about time in this case, this is all about how much heat it takes to
- 10:39
change the state of a substance and heat is measured in joules or kilo joules as
- 10:45
we have on our graph here right there now let's actually look at the line on [Line on water heat curve graph shown]
- 10:49
this thing we have periods where the temperature increases and times when it
- 10:53
plateaus well what's going on in these different segments? well like we said
- 10:58
when something melts its temperature doesn't increase until it's all the way
- 11:01
melted so these flat sections are where the transitions are happening and in
- 11:06
these parts where the temp is going up well the state of the matter is staying
- 11:10
the same we'll start at the left when things are pretty chill we know that
- 11:14
we've got a solid chunk of ice when things are this cold and it can take a
- 11:17
bunch of heat before anything interesting happens I'm guessing [People stood by an ice cube block]
- 11:21
watching ice get warmer is right up there with watching paint dry in the
- 11:24
pantheon of boring activities but as we get it up to zero we hit plateau number
- 11:29
one at the end of that section the thermometer starts going up again so we
- 11:33
know the phase transition is over we're all wet now then we have another flat
- 11:38
spot which you guessed it means another transition after a whole bunch more heat [Graph pointer moves along heat curve line]
- 11:42
or into gas land and this graph doesn't go all the way to plasma so we're not
- 11:47
gonna sweat that transition alright so we have
- 11:50
our melting point right here at zero degrees but what if we're reading this
- 11:53
graph from right to left like it's Hebrew or something well then we've got
- 11:57
freezing going on instead of melting it just depends on which direction we're
- 12:02
going and it's the same thing with boiling and condensing it's a matter of
- 12:06
which way we're you know walking the line all right
- 12:10
now what is our heat of fusion remember that's how much energy it takes to get [Heat of fusion graph appears]
- 12:14
from solid to liquid all the heat we pump in for this first flat section is
- 12:19
the heat of fusion if we had actual numbers on this graph we could just
- 12:23
subtract the lower heat amount here on the right from the higher heat amount
- 12:27
here on the left but we don't have numbers so you know just remember that
- 12:31
process and it's the same for the heat of vaporization we could calculate the
- 12:36
exact amount of heat by subtracting the heat at the start of the transition from
- 12:39
the heat at the end and we can do this kind of thing for any substance at all
- 12:43
this is a graph or some unknown substance yeah all right we can see that [heat of fusion graph for unknown substance]
- 12:47
it doesn't take a whole lot of heat to make its temperature increase when it's
- 12:50
a solid then it hits a phase transition at 55 degrees and it takes about 15
- 12:56
kilojoules of heat to completely turn into a liquid when it reaches 65 degrees
- 13:02
we get to phase transition number two and it requires 20 kilojoules to turn
- 13:07
our mystery heat into gas then the temp increases more gradually as we pump in
- 13:13
more thermal energy give us a thermometer a blowtorch and a bunch of [Thermometer and blowtorch appear]
- 13:17
different materials and we could make graphs like this all day which actually
- 13:21
sounds like a fun afternoon.... all right well things these days are
- 13:26
kind of slow turns out that when you advertise yourself as the magic [Melto magician advert appears]
- 13:30
physicist well people expect you to do a little
- 13:32
more than make ice melt and you don't get a lot of those harde gigs
- 13:36
with your amazing boiling water act... sorry maybe I should consider a phase [Kids throw tomatoes at magician]
- 13:41
transition of my own well now for my next trick I'm gonna turn potatoes into
- 13:46
French fries yeah I should have stayed in college
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