Learning objective

Distinguish boiling from evaporation using where and how the change occurs.

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At a glance

5

Flashcards

7

Questions

Topic

Changes of state and the particle model

Subtopic

Changes of state

AQA GCSE PhysicsParticle model of matter

Study support

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Short explanation

Distinguish boiling from evaporation using where and how the change occurs. Application lens: Apply the rule to the specific sample or situation instead of reciting a broad fact. In Changes of state, this means changes of state are explained by particle energy and arrangement. The answer should use the approved wording from Changes of state and the particle model, include boiling, evaporation, and avoid drifting into another section of Particle model of matter. For revision, practise saying the exact objective aloud, then add the one calculation, particle movement, collision, graph, or practical detail that makes the statement true. A strong exam response for checkpoint 24 is specific to distinguish boiling from evaporation using where and how the change occurs and does not reuse a generic explanation from a neighbouring objective.

Key concepts

BoilingEvaporation

Why it matters

This objective helps connect Changes of state to exam-style questions, flashcards, and revision notes for Changes of state and the particle model.

Common mistakes

1 linked
  • Boiling vs. Evaporation Confusion: Emphasize that boiling occurs throughout the liquid at a specific temperature, while evaporation happens only at the surface at any temperature.

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