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Density

Jonny Nelson explains density with a GCSE Physics practical experiment

Density describes how closely packed the particles are in a solid, liquid or gas.

is the amount of per unit .

Solids, liquids and gases

All contains particles. The difference between the different states of matter is how the particles are arranged:

  • in a solid - particles are tightly packed in a regular structure
  • in a liquid - particles are tightly packed but free to move past each other
  • in a gas - particles are spread out and move randomly
Solid cube: side length 1 unit, 64 particles in tightly packed lattice. Liquid cube: 1 unit, contains approx 30 particles. Gas cube: side length 10 units contains 15 scattered particles.
Figure caption,
Changing the state of a material will change its density

There is little difference between the density of a liquid and its corresponding solid, eg water and ice. This is because the particles are tightly packed in both states. The same number of particles in a gas would spread further apart compared to in the liquid or solid states. The same mass takes up a bigger volume - this means the gas is less dense.

Density also depends on the material. A piece of iron with the same dimensions as a piece of aluminium will be heavier because the atoms are more closely packed.

Scientists can measure how tightly packed the particles are by measuring the mass of a certain volume of the material, for example, one metre cubed.

MaterialDensity in kilograms per cubic centimetre (cm3)
Iron7,800
Ice980
Water1,000
Air1.2
MaterialIron
Density in kilograms per cubic centimetre (cm3)7,800
MaterialIce
Density in kilograms per cubic centimetre (cm3)980
MaterialWater
Density in kilograms per cubic centimetre (cm3)1,000
MaterialAir
Density in kilograms per cubic centimetre (cm3)1.2

Calculating density

Density can be calculated using the equation:

\(density = \frac{mass}{volume}\)

\(p = \frac{m}{V}\)

This is when:

  • density (p) is measured in kilograms per metre cubed (kg/m3)
  • mass (m) is measured in kilograms (kg)
  • volume (V) is measured in metres cubed (m3)

Example

What is the density of a material if 0.45 metres cubed (m3) of it has a mass of 0.2 kg?

\(p = \frac{m}{V}\)

\(p = \frac{0.2}{0.45}\)

\(p = 0.44~kg/m^3\)

Question

What is the density of a material if 4 metres cubed (m3) of it has a mass of 2,200 kg?

The units for density

Although the standard unit for mass is kilograms (kg) and for volume is metres cubed (m3), in many laboratory situations the norm is finding the mass in grams (g) and volume in centimetres cubed (cm3).

Calculating density using grams and centimetres cubed would give a density unit of grams per centimetre cubed (g/cm3).

Question

What is the density of a material if 15 cm3 of it has a mass of 30 g?

  • To convert from kg/m3 to g/cm3, divide by 1,000.
  • To convert from g/cm3 to kg/m3, multiply by 1,000.

Aluminium has a density of 2.7 g/cm3, or 2,700 kg/m3. Lead has a density of 11.6 g/cm3, or 11,600 kg/m3.

Example

Iron has a density of 7.9 g/cm3. What is this in kg/m3?

7.9 multiplied by 1,000 gives 7,900 kg/m3.

Question

What is the density of an object in kg/m3 if it is 22.61 g/cm3?