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How does pressure influence the phase of a substance?

Pressure plays a crucial role in determining the phase of a substance because it affects how tightly particles are packed and the energy required for phase changes.


1. General Principle

  • Increasing pressure generally favors the phase with the higher density because particles are forced closer together.
    • Example: For most substances, solid is denser than liquid, so higher pressure can promote solid formation.
  • Decreasing pressure favors less dense phases, such as gases, because particles have more space to move.

2. Specific Effects

  1. Solid–Liquid Transition (Melting/Freezing)
    • If a solid is denser than its liquid (like most metals), increasing pressure raises the melting point.
    • Exception: Water. Ice is less dense than liquid water, so increasing pressure lowers the melting point, which is why ice can melt under high pressure (ice skating works because of this!).
  2. Liquid–Gas Transition (Boiling/Condensation)
    • Boiling occurs when the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the external pressure.
    • Higher pressure → higher boiling point (because vapor formation is harder under pressure).
    • Lower pressure → lower boiling point, which is why water boils at <100°C on a mountain.
  3. Solid–Gas Transition (Sublimation/Deposition)
    • Sublimation (solid → gas) is easier at low pressure, because gas molecules can escape more readily.

3. Phase Diagrams

On a P–T phase diagram:

  • Phase boundaries slope depending on density differences.
  • Triple point shifts with pressure changes.
  • Critical point marks the limit above which liquid and gas are indistinguishable.

4. Intuitive Takeaway

  • High pressure → favors dense phases (solid > liquid > gas, usually).
  • Low pressure → favors less dense phases (gas > liquid > solid).
  • Phase transitions (melting, boiling, sublimation) depend strongly on pressure.

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