Thermal Expansion
Sublimation and Thermal Effects: Thermal Expansion
Thermal Expansion
Thermal Expansion
What you'll learn
- Most solids, liquids, and gases get slightly bigger when they are heated. This is called thermal expansion.
- Everyday examples: gaps in railway tracks, sagging electric wires in summer, a thermometer's liquid rising when heated, a tight metal jar lid loosening under hot water, and a balloon swelling in the sun.
- Engineers plan for expansion so that heated materials have room to grow without cracking or buckling.
Key concepts
Level 1 — What is thermal expansion?
Verbal: When a material is heated, it usually expands — it takes up a little more space than before.
Symbolic: Heating → material gets slightly bigger (expands).
| Example | What happens on heating |
|---|---|
| Railway track | Metal rail expands slightly in summer heat |
| Electric wires | Wire expands and sags a little more on hot days |
| Thermometer liquid | Liquid expands and rises up the tube |
| Metal jar lid | Expands more than glass, loosening the lid |
| Balloon in sunlight | Trapped air expands, balloon swells |
Level 2 — Why engineers plan for expansion
Real-life: Railway tracks and metal bridges are built with small gaps so the metal has room to expand on hot days without buckling or cracking.
Worked example
Why does running hot water over a tight metal jar lid often help you open it?
Step 1 — Heat makes the metal lid expand.
Step 2 — The metal expands more than the glass jar underneath it.
Step 3 — This slightly loosens the grip of the lid on the jar.
Answer: The lid expands and loosens, making it easier to twist open.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Thinking heat always shrinks things | Confusing with cooling | Heat generally makes materials expand, not shrink |
| Thinking only metals expand | Overgeneralising | Liquids and gases also expand on heating, often more than solids |
| Ignoring the need for expansion gaps | Not connecting to real structures | Gaps in tracks and bridges exist to allow safe expansion |
Quick check
- What happens to most materials when they are heated?
- Why do railway tracks have small gaps between sections?
- Why does a thermometer's liquid rise when placed in hot water?
Stretch: Why might overhead electric wires be hung a little loose on purpose?
Revision tip: Remember: heat → expand (grow bigger).
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Thermal Expansion.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
Master this topic with Drishti OS
Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.
Start Free Practice