This MCQ module is based on: Three States of Matter and Interparticle Spacing
Three States of Matter and Interparticle Spacing
Recap and Lead-in
In Part 1 we saw that matter is made of tiny particles with spaces between them, and that these particles are always in motion. But then why is a wooden block hard, juice flowing, and the smell of agarbatti able to fill a room? The answer lies in how close those particles sit and how strongly they hold each other.
7.3 How Does the Interparticle Spacing Differ in Three States?
The single most important difference between a solid, a liquid and a gas is the interparticle spacing — the gap between neighbouring particles.
You need: three plastic syringes (without needles), a stopper or tight cap, some water.
- Syringe A — draw the plunger out to fill it with air. Seal the nozzle with your thumb. Press the plunger.
- Syringe B — suck up water to fill it. Seal the nozzle. Press the plunger.
- Syringe C — push the plunger in first, then seal the nozzle (nothing inside). Try to pull the plunger back.
Why? Gas particles are very far apart, so they can be pushed closer. Liquid particles are already close, so there is little room to squeeze. And you cannot compress nothing.
Particle Pictures of the Three States
| Property | Solid | Liquid | Gas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shape | Fixed | Takes the shape of container | Fills container |
| Volume | Fixed | Fixed | Not fixed |
| Interparticle spacing | Very small | Small | Very large |
| Force between particles | Very strong | Moderate | Very weak |
| Compressibility | Almost none | Very slight | High |
| Motion of particles | Only vibration | Slide and tumble | Rapid random flight |
| Examples | Ice, iron, wood, salt | Water, oil, milk, mercury | Air, oxygen, helium, water vapour |
- Try gently pressing a plastic ruler against a wooden block — can you push it through?
- Move the ruler through a bowl of water — notice the resistance.
- Wave it through the air — almost no resistance.
Why? Solid particles are locked so tightly that nothing can push between them. Liquid particles are close but can be pushed aside. Gas particles are so far apart that there is mostly empty space — the ruler sails through.
7.4 Change of State
Heat an ice cube on a plate. It turns to water. Keep heating — the water turns to steam. Leave the ice alone in a freezer, it stays solid. What is really happening?
In all these changes, the substance is still H2O. The same water particles are present in ice, water and steam. What changes is only the arrangement and energy of these particles.
Why Does Heating Change the State?
Heating gives particles extra energy. In a solid this makes them vibrate faster until they break free of their fixed positions — the solid melts. More heating makes liquid particles escape their neighbours completely and fly apart — the liquid boils. Cooling reverses all this: gas → liquid (condensation), liquid → solid (freezing).
🎯 State Predictor — Interactive L3 Apply
Drag the slider to change the average spacing between particles and see which state that corresponds to.
Particles are locked in place — the substance has a fixed shape and volume.
📋 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L1 Remember Which state of matter has a fixed volume but not a fixed shape?
Q2. L2 Understand Why does Reyansh's air-filled syringe compress easily while the water-filled one barely moves?
Q3. L3 Apply On the teacher's particle diagram, which change — ice to water or water to steam — shows the bigger jump in spacing? Justify.
Q4. L4 Analyse In the empty syringe C, Reyansh says "nothing moves". Explain in terms of particles why neither pushing in nor pulling out the plunger works.
Q5. L5 Evaluate Reyansh says: "Since steam has much more volume than water, new matter must have been created on boiling." Evaluate his claim.
🔗 Assertion–Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Gases can be compressed easily, but liquids cannot.
Reason (R): Interparticle spacing in a gas is much larger than in a liquid.
Assertion (A): When ice melts into water, a new substance is formed.
Reason (R): Melting rearranges particles but does not change their identity.
Assertion (A): Solids have a fixed shape.
Reason (R): The forces between particles in a solid are very strong, holding particles in fixed positions.