Heating up!
Gas Laws
Thermodynamics
Phase Changes
Kinetic Molecular Theory
100

Which heats up faster: high or low specific heat?

Low Specific Heat

100

As volume increases, what will happen to pressure of an ideal gas?

Decreases (Boyles Law)

100
This type of reaction releases heat into the surroundings

Exothermic

100

Gas turning into a Liquid.

Condensation

100

Gas particles are always in what type of motion?

Random motion

200

This term defines the amount of heat needed to change the temperature of a certain substance.

Specific Heat

200

The relationship between temperature and volume is?

Directly Proportional

200

This type of reaction absorbs heat into the system

Endothermic

200

Liquid turns into a Solid.

Freezing

200

Collisions in ideal gases have what types of collisions?

Elastic 

300

Which substance has lower specific heat, Iron or Wood?

Iron

300

When volume increases, what happens with temperature?

It also increases (Charle's Law)

300

Endothermic reactions require what?

Energy input

300

Which reaction is exothermic, freezing or melting?

Freezing

300

What measurable factor is directly related to kinetic energy?

Temperature

400

What is the formula for heat energy?

q = mc x ΔT 

400

According the Boyle's Law the volume of a gas will increase and the pressure decreases.  What type of relationship is this?

Inversely Proportional 

400

True or false: Exothermic reactions feel cold. 

False

400

Which phase change absorbs energy into the system, boiling or condensation?

Boiling

400

Describe motion of particles in a solid.

Vibrate in place

500

If a substance resists temperature change, that means that it has high or low specific heat?

High Specific Heat

500

What is the formula for an ideal gas?

PV=nRT

500

Which has more energy in an endothermic reaction: reactants or products?

Products

Reactants → Products + Heat

500

Which two phase changes release energy into the surroundings?

Melting & Boiling or Freezing & Condesation

Freezing & Condensation

500

Why do gas particles not lose energy when they collide?

Elastic Collisions

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