Lesson 13
Changes in Particles with States of Matter
Optional Home Activities
Vocabulary
- Attraction: The pulling force between particles that holds them together. It is strongest in solids, weaker in liquids, and absent in gases.
- Particle vibration: The constant internal movement of particles in all matter. It increases with temperature.
- Diffusion: The spreading of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.
- State change: The shift of a substance from one state of matter to another, caused by a change in temperature.
- Mass movement: The movement of a whole object or substance from one place to another. This is different from particle vibration.
Discussion Questions
- If weight stays the same when state changes, why does a full glass of water overflow when you freeze it?
- If you could somehow slow particles down to nearly zero movement, what state of matter would you expect every substance to be in?
- A smell spreads faster in a warm room than a cold one. How does the particle model explain this?
Hands-On Activity: Diffusion Experiment
Supply List
- Three identical clear glasses or jars
- Hot water (teacher pours; not boiling)
- Cold water (add ice first, then remove ice before adding food coloring)
- Room temperature water
- Food coloring (one color)
- A dropper or spoon
- Notebook and pencil
Instructions
- Fill each glass with one type of water: one hot, one room temperature, one cold. Label them.
- At the same time, add one drop of food coloring to each glass. Do not stir.
- Observe all three glasses and record what you see every 30 seconds for about three minutes.
- Discuss: in which glass did the color spread fastest? In which did it spread slowest? Why?
- Connect to particles: in hot water, particles are moving faster and with more energy, so the food coloring particles spread and mix quickly. In cold water, slower-moving particles mean slower mixing.
- Write your conclusion: what does the speed of diffusion tell us about how temperature affects particle movement?
Sources
- Nebel, Bernard J. Building Foundations of Scientific Understanding. A-4 Matter I: Its Particulate Nature
- Particle Facts for Kids. (n.d.). https://kids.kiddle.co/Particle
- 5.Structure and Properties of Matter | Next Generation Science Standards. (n.d.). https://www.nextgenscience.org/topic-arrangement/5structure-and-properties-matter
- Robinson, A., & Robinson, A. (2025, July 25). Grade 5 – 5-PS1 Matter and its interactions. Exploring Nature. https://exploringnature.org/grade-5-5-ps1-matter-and-its-interactions/
- Britannica Editors. (2026, May 29). Matter | Definition, Physics, Characteristics, States, Examples, & Facts. Encyclopedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/science/matter
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