In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Matter's Great Dance
Everything is made of tiny particles that are always moving. How they are arranged and how much they move determines whether something is a solid, liquid or gas — and heating or cooling changes that motion, driving every change of state.
Imagine people at an event. Sitting in fixed seats in a theatre, fidgeting but never leaving their spot, they are like particles in a solid. Mingling shoulder-to-shoulder at a party, close together but sliding past one another, they are like a liquid. Sprinting around a huge empty park, far apart and moving randomly, they are like a gas. Turning up the 'energy' of the crowd is what moves them from one scene to the next.
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First, identify the state of a substance by its properties — does it hold its own shape and volume?
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Next, picture the particles: a fixed lattice (solid), close but mobile (liquid), or far apart and fast (gas)?
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Then track the energy — heating raises particle motion (kinetic energy); at a change of state the energy instead goes into overcoming the forces between particles (potential energy).
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Finally, if you have a mixture rather than a pure substance, choose a separation method that exploits a difference in a physical property (particle size, boiling point, or affinity for a surface).
Explore the concept
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Step 1
First, identify the state of a substance by its properties — does it hold its own shape and volume?
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
The kinetic molecular theory
The particulate nature of matter is captured by the kinetic molecular theory, a model with a few simple postulates that turn out to explain a huge amount. Because it is a model, it is an approximation — but a powerful one that predicts real behaviour reliably at this level.
All matter is made of small particles (atoms, molecules or ions) with empty space between them.
The particles are in constant, random motion.
The average kinetic energy of the particles is directly proportional to the absolute (Kelvin) temperature — hotter means faster.
There are forces of attraction between the particles; their strength, set against the particles' energy, determines whether the substance is a solid, liquid or gas.
Classifying matter: elements, compounds and mixtures
Before describing states, it helps to classify what the particles actually are. Matter is either a pure substance (an element or a compound) or a mixture. An element contains only one kind of atom and cannot be broken down chemically. A compound contains two or more elements chemically bonded together in a fixed whole-number ratio, so its properties differ completely from those of its elements. A mixture contains two or more substances that are only physically combined, in any proportion; each keeps its own properties, and the components can be separated by physical means such as those in the last section of this lesson.
Element: one type of atom only (e.g. copper Cu, oxygen O₂). Cannot be split by chemical reactions.
Compound: elements chemically bonded in a fixed ratio (e.g. water H₂O, sodium chloride NaCl). Fixed composition; new properties.
Mixture: substances physically mixed in any ratio (e.g. air, seawater, brass). Components keep their own properties and are physically separable.
Homogeneous mixture: uniform throughout, no visible boundaries between components (e.g. salt water, clean air, an alloy such as brass). A single visible phase.
Heterogeneous mixture: non-uniform, with distinct regions or phases you can tell apart (e.g. sand and iron filings, oil and water, granite).
'Homogeneous' does not mean 'a single substance' — it means uniform composition. Air and salt water are homogeneous MIXTURES: still mixtures (separable by physical means), but uniform to the eye. Do not confuse a homogeneous mixture with a compound; the mixture has no fixed ratio and can be separated physically.
The three states of matter
The state of a substance at a given temperature and pressure is decided by the balance between the kinetic energy of its particles and the forces of attraction between them. As energy is added, the particles move faster and the forces are progressively overcome, taking the substance from solid to liquid to gas.
Solids: particles held in fixed positions in a regular crystal lattice, closely packed; least kinetic energy; only vibrate. Fixed shape and fixed volume.
Liquids: particles still close together but randomly arranged; enough energy to slide past one another. Fixed volume, but take the shape of the container.
Gases: particles far apart and randomly arranged; high kinetic energy; move rapidly in all directions with negligible forces between them. No fixed shape or volume — they expand to fill the container and are compressible.
Temperature, the Kelvin scale and kinetic energy
Temperature is a measure of the AVERAGE kinetic energy of the particles in a substance — not the total energy, and not the energy of any single particle (particles in a sample have a spread of speeds). Because kinetic energy is proportional to the ABSOLUTE temperature, chemists measure temperature on the Kelvin scale, where 0 K is absolute zero (−273 °C), the point of minimum particle motion. Convert with the relationship T in kelvin = T in degrees Celsius + 273. On the Kelvin scale, doubling the temperature doubles the average kinetic energy; on the Celsius scale it does not, which is why Kelvin is used whenever particle energy matters.
When a question links temperature to particle energy, always say 'average kinetic energy' and refer to the KELVIN (absolute) temperature. Writing that energy is proportional to the Celsius temperature is a common and easily avoided error.
Changes of state
Substances move between states by gaining or losing energy, usually as heat. These are physical changes because the chemical identity of the substance does not change — ice, liquid water and steam are all H₂O. Changes that absorb energy to pull particles apart are endothermic; changes that release energy as particles come together are exothermic. Crucially, the energy involved goes into overcoming or re-forming the forces of attraction BETWEEN particles, never the bonds within molecules.
Melting (s → l): endothermic. Energy overcomes the forces holding particles in the lattice.
Boiling / vaporisation (l → g): endothermic. Energy separates particles fully against the forces holding the liquid together.
Sublimation (s → g): endothermic. Direct solid to gas, e.g. dry ice, CO₂(s), and iodine.
Freezing / solidification (l → s): exothermic. Energy is released as particles settle into the lattice.
Condensation (g → l): exothermic. Energy is released as gas particles come together into a liquid.
Deposition (g → s): exothermic. Direct gas to solid, e.g. frost forming on a cold surface.
Interpreting heating and cooling curves
A heating curve plots temperature against time as a substance is heated at a constant rate; a cooling curve is its mirror image. The SLOPED sections show the temperature changing — here the average kinetic energy of the particles is rising (heating) or falling (cooling). The FLAT plateaus occur during a change of state: the temperature is constant because the energy being added or removed is changing the particles' POTENTIAL energy (overcoming or re-forming forces of attraction), not their kinetic energy. Reading a curve is really a matter of asking, at each part, whether kinetic energy or potential energy is changing.
To explain why temperature is constant during a phase change, be precise: state that the energy supplied is used to overcome the forces of attraction between particles, increasing their POTENTIAL energy, NOT their kinetic energy — and that temperature is a measure of average kinetic energy. Saying merely 'the energy is used for the phase change' rarely earns full marks.
Separating mixtures
Because the components of a mixture keep their own physical properties, we can separate them by exploiting a DIFFERENCE in one of those properties. The trick in exams is to match the method to the difference — particle size, solubility, boiling point, or affinity for a surface.
Filtration — separates an insoluble solid from a liquid, using a difference in particle size. The solid stays on the filter paper as the residue; the liquid passing through is the filtrate. Example: sand from water.
Evaporation / crystallisation — recovers a soluble solid from its solution by evaporating the solvent, leaving the solid behind. Example: obtaining salt from salt water.
Simple distillation — recovers the pure liquid (solvent) from a solution by boiling it off and condensing the vapour; the dissolved solid stays behind. Example: pure water from seawater.
Fractional distillation — separates two or more miscible liquids with different boiling points; the more volatile liquid vaporises and condenses first. Example: ethanol from a water–ethanol mixture; components of crude oil.
Chromatography — separates dissolved components by their different affinities for a stationary phase versus a mobile phase; the component more attracted to the mobile phase travels furthest. Example: separating and identifying dyes in an ink or pigments in a leaf.
Distillation vs evaporation trips students up. If you want the SOLID back, evaporate the solvent away. If you want the pure LIQUID back, distil — the vapour is condensed and collected while the solute is left behind. Read carefully which component the question asks you to recover.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Saying melting or boiling 'breaks the bonds' of the molecules — a change of state overcomes the forces of attraction BETWEEN molecules, not the covalent bonds within them. Steam is still H₂O.
Claiming temperature rises during a change of state — on the plateau the temperature is constant; the energy changes potential energy, not kinetic energy.
Confusing kinetic and potential energy — kinetic energy changes on the slopes (temperature changing); potential energy changes on the plateaus (state changing). Do not swap them.
Using Celsius where Kelvin is required — average kinetic energy is proportional to the ABSOLUTE (Kelvin) temperature; convert with +273.
Confusing a homogeneous mixture with a compound — a homogeneous mixture (air, salt water) is uniform but has no fixed ratio and is separable physically; a compound has a fixed ratio and needs a chemical change to break apart.
Muddling boiling and evaporation — boiling is a bulk process at one fixed temperature; evaporation is a surface process at any temperature.
Choosing the wrong separation — filtration only works for an INSOLUBLE solid; you cannot filter salt out of salt water because it is dissolved.
Where this leads
The particle model you have just built is the lens for almost everything ahead. When later topics ask why ionic compounds have high melting points, why gases exert pressure, or how intermolecular forces set boiling points, the underlying question is always the same one from this lesson: how are the particles arranged, how much energy do they have, and how strongly are they attracted to one another? This content is common to SL and HL at this level; HL extensions appear in later Structure 1 topics.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A sample of solid naphthalene, C₁₀H₈, is heated from 60 °C to 100 °C. Its melting point is 80 °C and its boiling point is 218 °C. Describe the arrangement and motion of the particles at (i) 70 °C and (ii) 90 °C.
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(i) At 70 °C (below the melting point, so solid):
- Arrangement: the C₁₀H₈ molecules are held in a regular, repeating crystal lattice, closely packed. [1 mark]
- Motion: they vibrate about fixed positions but cannot move from place to place. [1 mark]
The cooling curve for lauric acid is recorded, starting from its liquid phase. The temperature falls from 60 °C, holds constant at 44 °C for several minutes, then falls again.
(a) State the freezing point of lauric acid. (b) Explain, in terms of particles and energy, what is happening during the constant-temperature section. (c) What state is the lauric acid in on the final downward slope?
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(a) The freezing point is the temperature of the flat plateau on the cooling curve: 44 °C. [1 mark]
Paper 2 style: Explain, in terms of particles, what happens to the arrangement and motion of the particles when a solid is heated until it melts and then boils. [4]
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Model answer: In the solid, the particles are held closely together in a fixed, regular lattice and can only vibrate about fixed positions. As the solid is heated, the particles gain kinetic energy and vibrate more vigorously. At the melting point, the particles have enough energy to overcome the forces of attraction holding them in the lattice, so they break free of their fixed positions: the arrangement becomes random (though still closely packed) and the particles can now move past one another — the substance is a liquid. On further heating the particles gain still more kinetic energy and move faster. At the boiling point they have enough energy to overcome the remaining forces of attraction completely, so they separate widely: the particles become far apart, randomly arranged, and move rapidly in all directions — the substance is a gas.
How it all connects
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Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
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Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
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Particulate nature of matter
The model that all matter is composed of discrete, tiny particles (atoms, molecules or ions) that are in constant, random motion. Their arrangement and energy determine an object's macroscopic properties.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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All matter is made of small particles (atoms, molecules or ions) with empty space between them.
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The particles are in constant, random motion.
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The average kinetic energy of the particles is directly proportional to the absolute (Kelvin) temperature — hotter means faster.
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There are forces of attraction between the particles; their strength, set against the particles' energy, determines whether the substance is a solid, liquid or gas.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Get a Paper 2 particle-model answer marked: describe arrangement and motion through melting and boiling
Get a Paper 2 particle-model answer marked: describe arrangement and motion through melting and boiling
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