Chemistry, asked by learningisfunwithanu, 3 days ago

What is the particulate theory of matter? Give any two points.

Class : VI

Need the answer real quick!​

Answers

Answered by suchirb13
2
1)All Matter is made up of tiny particles, invisible to the naked eye. 2)All particles in a pure substance are the same. Different substances are made up of different particles. 3)Particles have spaces between them, regardless of size. 4)Particles move faster and spread more when heated.
Answered by faizakhan809sis
1

Answer:

Particle Theory

Content

Particle Theory - Introduction

Solids, liquid and gases

The properties of matter

Changes of state

Melting

Evaporating

Boiling

Dissolving

Physical Changes

Chemical Changes

Self Assessment

Requirements from ITT Primary Science National Curriculum

Particle Theory - Introduction

The kinetic theory of matter (particle theory) says that all matter consists of many, very small particles which are constantly moving or in a continual state of motion. The degree to which the particles move is determined by the amount of energy they have and their relationship to other particles. The particles might be atoms, molecules or ions. Use of the general term 'particle' means the precise nature of the particles does not have to be specified.

Particle theory helps to explain properties and behaviour of materials by providing a model which enables us to visualise what is happening on a very small scale inside those materials. As a model it is useful because it appears to explain many phenomena but as with all models it does have limitations.

Solids, liquids and gases

n solids the particles

n liquids the particles

In gases the particles

are held tightly and packed fairly close together - they are strongly attracted to each other

o are in fixed positions but they do vibrate

are fairly close together with some attraction between them

are able to move around in all directions but movement is limited by attractions between particles

have little attraction between them

are free to move in all directions and collide with each other and with the walls of a container and are widely spaced out

The model can be used to help explain:

the properties of matter

what happens during physical changes such as melting, boiling and evaporating

The properties of matter

Solids

Liquids

Gases

have a definite shape

maintain that shape

are difficult to compress as the particles are already packed closely together

are often dense as there are many particles packed closely together

do not have a definite shape

flow and fill the bottom of a container. They maintain the same volume unless the temperature changes

are difficult to compress because there are quite a lot of particles in a small volume

are often dense because there are quite a lot of particles in a small volume

do not have a definite shape

expand to fill any container

are easily compressed because there are only a few particles in a large volume

are often low density as there are not many particles in a large space

Why do you think that the same volume of different materials have differing masses

E.g. 1cm3 of gold weighs 19.3g but 1cm3 of aluminium weighs 2.7g

Similar questions