Phase Diagram Worksheet 2

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Phase Diagram Worksheet #2

For each of the questions on this worksheet, refer to the phase diagram for
mysterious compound X.

1) What is the critical temperature of compound X? ___________

2) If you were to have a bottle containing compound X in your oven, what


phase would it most likely be in?
_____________________

3) Name some set of conditions where the liquid and gas forms of this
material would be in equilibrium with one another.

_____________________________________

4) If I have a bottle of compound X at a pressure of 0.45 atm and


temperature of 1000 C, what will happen if I raise the temperature to 3000
C?

_____________________________________

5) If you were to compress a chunk of X at its triple point, what would happen
to it?

_____________________________________

6) What compound does compound X share properties with?

_____________________________________

This work is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.


More chemistry tutorials and practice can be found at www.chemfiesta.com.
Phase Diagram Worksheet #2
For each of the questions on this worksheet, refer to the phase diagram for
mysterious compound X.

1) What is the critical temperature of compound X? 374 degrees Celsius

2) If you were to have a bottle containing compound X in your oven, what


phase would it most likely be in?
Gas

3) Name some set of conditions where the liquid and gas forms of this
material would be in equilibrium with one another.
Any set of conditions on the line between liquid and gas works. The
simplest such example would be 1 atm and 100 degrees Celsius.

4) If I have a bottle of compound X at a pressure of 0.45 atm and


temperature of 1000 C, what will happen if I raise the temperature to 3000
C?
Aside from getting hotter, nothing. At 0.45 atm and 100 degrees it's a
gas, and heating it will just make it a hotter gas.

5) If you were to compress a chunk of X at its triple point, what would happen
to it?
It would melt.

6) What compound does compound X share properties with? Water!

Note: This phase diagram is originally the work of Petr Sladek and obtained at Wikimedia Commons
under the GNU Free Documentation License. For that reason, this worksheet is also
licensed under the same terms.

This work is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.


More chemistry tutorials and practice can be found at www.chemfiesta.com.

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