Matter


Matter In Our Surroundings

Anything that has mass and takes up space is referred to as matter. hydrogen and oxygen, sugar and sand, air and water, etc. Small, minuscule particles make up matter. Due to the space between them, matter particles are attracted to one another.

States of Matter

  • Matter can be classified as solid, liquid or gas on the basis of interparticle forces and the arrangement of particles.
  • These three forms of matter are interconvertible by increasing or decreasing pressure and temperature.  For example, ice can be converted from solid to a liquid by increasing the temperature.
Property SolidLiquidGas
Shape and volumeFixed shape and volumeNo fixed shape but has volumeNeither definite shape nor volume
EnergyLowestMediumHighest
CompressibilityDifficultNearly difficultEasy
Arrangement of moleculesRegular and closely arrangedRandom and little sparsely arrangedRandom and more sparsely arranged
FluidityCannot flowFlows from higher to lower levelFlows in all directions
MovementNegligibleDepends on interparticle attractionFree, constant and random
Interparticle spaceVery lessMoreLarge
Interparticle attractionMaximumMediumMinimum
DensityMaximumMediumMinimum
Rate of diffusionNegligibleIt depends on interparticle attraction.Maximum

Atomic View of the Three States of Matter

solids structure
Solid
liquids structure
Liquid
Gas molecules
Gas



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