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How does physical chemistry explain phase transitions?

Phase transitions—like ice melting, water boiling, or steam condensing—happen when matter changes from one state to another. Physical chemistry explains them by looking at energy, disorder, and how molecules behave.

  1. Energy and stability:
    Every phase (solid, liquid, gas) has a certain energy. A substance changes phase when the new phase becomes more stable under the current conditions (temperature and pressure).
  2. Heat and disorder:
    • Melting or boiling requires energy to break the forces holding molecules together.
    • Freezing or condensation releases energy because molecules settle into a more ordered arrangement.
    • During these changes, the disorder of molecules (entropy) also changes: liquids are more disordered than solids, and gases are more disordered than liquids.
  3. Molecular perspective:
    Molecules are constantly moving. A phase transition happens when their motion and interactions reach a point where the molecules can rearrange into a different structure.
    • In solids, molecules are tightly packed and vibrate in place.
    • In liquids, molecules move more freely.
    • In gases, molecules move very fast and far apart.
  4. Phase diagrams:
    Physical chemists use diagrams showing which phase is stable at different temperatures and pressures. These diagrams help predict when a substance will melt, boil, or condense.
  5. Types of phase transitions:
    • First-order: There’s a clear jump in energy and structure (like melting or boiling).
    • Second-order: The change is more subtle, like in certain magnetic or superconducting transitions.

In short: phase transitions happen when energy, molecular movement, and stability combine so that a new phase becomes favorable.

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