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5.1: Phases of Water

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    21681
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    A water molecule is composed of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. The molecule looks kind of like Mickey Mouse, with the oxygen forming the head and the two hydrogen forming the ears. Water molecules cluster together by bonding to the hydrogen atoms of neighboring water molecules. Water exists in one of three phases, solid, liquid, or gas. The molecules that comprise a solid, like ice, are arranged in a particular order. The molecules do not circulate but they do move. That is, the molecules vibrate in place around an average location. Solids represent the lowest level of kinetic energy. The molecules of a liquid, like water, have a higher kinetic energy level than solids and thus are free to circulate as "clumps" of molecules but constrained by a surface. Molecules of a gas are free to circulate as well, but are unconfined and move about with the highest kinetic energy level.

    Phase changes of water
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Phase changes of water.

    In order for water to change from a solid to liquid and finally to a gas, the water molecule must gain energy. The energy absorbed by water is used for two purposes: first, to increase the kinetic energy without causing a phase change (e.g. from cold water to warm water), and second, to break the hydrogen bonds to affect a phase change (e.g. boiling) to break the hydrogen bonds between groups of molecules. When the bonds are broken between the molecules of ice, it melts and they can circulate as a fluid. The energy required to convert ice into water is called the latent heat of fusion. It takes about 80 calories of heat to convert one gram of ice into water.

    Water_Phase_Change_Diagram.png

    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): Graph illustrating the relationship between temperature and energy during water phase changes (Source: Wikimedia Commons)


    5.1: Phases of Water is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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