Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of...

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S Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions

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Transcript of Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of...

Page 1: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

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Intro to ChemistryChapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3

A Preview of Coming Attractions

Page 2: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

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ONLY INTENDED FOR MATURE STUDENTS!

RIGOROUS

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Page 3: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Graffiti Wall Graffiti wall Keep it clean and school

appropriate. Write whatever you like on the

orange wall. Maybe it will end up being cool.

Page 4: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Taking notes... CUES

1-2words

CUES

Main part for Notes... Use bullet

points.......

Abbreviate .. Draw

pictures to. help you... You do

not have . to write in

. complete

. sentences.

Main Part for Notes

Summary Section…one or two sentences about this page of notes

1.Take notes in the MAIN part of the page.

2.The CUES are hints. Cover up the main part and see if the cues help you to recall that information when you study.

3.The SUMMARY is what the page is all about. Or you can add something later in this part.

4.Use loose leaf paper and a binder.

Do this part first.

Do 2nd

Do last!

Page 5: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

化学 Chemistry in Japanese Literally means “change study.” Chemistry is the study of matter: the composition of matter and the changes matter undergoes.

Did you start taking notes yet?

Page 6: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chemistry is not relevant to my life. Am I ever going to

use THIS?How should I know?

But since Chemistry is all around you, I’m going to guess YES.

Do you like to cook?Do you want a pool?

Page 7: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

The Scientific Method

Chapter 1.3 Observation Use your senses to make observations

and suggest questions. Hypothesis

A testable “educated guess.” Experiment

Supports and proves your hypothesis (or doesn’t support and disproves)

Page 8: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

The Scientific Method

Analysis of Data Analyze data collected during the

experiment. Conclusion

What happened? Was your hypothesis supported or not (try

NOT to think of it as success vs failure)? How could you improve your experiment? How could you expand upon your original

experiment?

Page 9: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Scientific Theory Theory

A detailed explanation explaining why an experiment works the way it does.

A theory can never be PROVEN completely true.

A theory can always be disproved if new data doesn’t support the theory.

If that happens, theory needs to be revised or discarded.

Page 10: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Scientific Theory Theory

It doesn’t matter how many scientists believe it. Believing it is true doesn’t make it so.

Consensus isn’t science. The only thing that matters is if the scientific data supports the theory.

Page 11: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Scientific Law Law

A law is a statement of fact, usually concerning a natural phenomenon.

It doesn’t explain how or why.

Theories explain. Laws don’t explain. They just tell you what it is.

Lets talk about an important law:

Page 12: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

The Law of Conservation of

Mass In any chemical reaction or physical change, matter can neither be created nor destroyed.

The amount of matter (mass) doesn’t change. However, the identity of the matter (what type

of substance it is) could change.

mass of the reactancts = mass of the products

Page 13: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chapter 2

Back to matter… Matter can be broken down into

substances and mixtures. Substances are pure.

Elements (smallest part of an element is an atom)

Compounds (smallest part of a compound is a molecule)

Page 14: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Substances vs mixtures

Carbon is a substance. Water is a substance. Air is a mixture of substances (O2,

N2, CO2, etc)

Page 15: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Substances vs mixtures?

You try some Methane (natural gas) Coffee Copper Salt Dirt Sand

Page 16: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Substances: Elements

Elements are on the Periodic Table. 118 elements exist 90 occur naturally (1-92 except for 43Tc

and 61Pm) Elements 93 and higher are man made

(most of them by Dr. Glenn Seaborg)

Page 17: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Substances: Compounds

Compounds are pure substances too. Common compounds are: Salt (sodium chloride) Sugar (sucrose) Baking Soda (sodium bicarbonate) Sand (silicon dioxide) Rubbing Alcohol (isopropanol) Carbon dioxide

Page 18: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Ionic Compounds vs Molecular Compounds

There are 2 types of compounds Ionic compounds have ionic bonds and are

composed of positive and negative ions. Ions are formed when atoms lose or gain

electrons. Molecular compounds have covalent

bonds. Electrons are shared between atoms. There

are no ions or charges.

Page 19: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Substances: Elements and Compounds

How do you tell if it’s an element or a compound? An element cannot be broken down

into anything simpler. A compound can be separated into

smaller elements. You must use a chemical reaction to break down a compound.

Page 20: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Compound vs Mixture

How do you tell if it’s an compound or a mixture? A compound is bonded together. You must

use a chemical reaction to break down a compound into elements.

A mixture isn’t bonded together. The substances are just mixed together. A mixture may be separated by physical separation techniques.

Page 21: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

What are physical separation techniques?

Evaporation—can separate DISSOLVED solids from the liquid.

Filtration—can separate UNDISSOLVED solids from the liquid.

Decanting—can separate a dense undissolved solid from the liquid (because the solid is on the bottom and so you can pour off the liquid).

Page 22: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

A physical separation technique sometimes tested

on the SOL. Chromatography

Can be used to separate a mixture of solids dissolved in a liquid. Ink Natural dyes

Page 23: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Homework

HW: research chromatography online. Type a 3 paragraph essay (5 for Adv Chem) on chromatography. MLA Format.

Cite your sources (need 3, none of which may be Wikipedia; however, Wikipedia is a great place to start and learn about the topic).

Schwartz Definition of Paragraph = 5 well constructed sentences which all relate to the same main idea.

Page 24: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chemical Reactions

Reactants Products You can have 1 or more reactants You will produce 1 or more products How many you need and how much you

produce is characteristic of the specific reaction. We will study 5 major types of reactions starting

in Chapter 8. Chemical reactions are PERMANENT and NOT

reversible.

Page 25: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Physical Properties

Matter has both physical and chemical properties.

Physical properties can be observed without CHANGING the type of matter.

When solid water (ice) melts it becomes liquid water. A change of state is a physical change (Δ or delta means change).

Physical changes are NOT permanent and are reversible.

Page 26: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chemical Properties

Chemical properties can be ONLY be observed BY CHANGING the type of matter.

When salt (NaCl) is dissolved in water, a solution is formed. That is a physical change. The salt is still salt and the water is still water. You can separate them easily by evaporating the water.

Page 27: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chemical Properties

But when sodium oxide (Na2O) is dissolved in water a solution is formed at first, but then a chemical reaction occurs. That is a chemical change. Sodium oxide reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide (NaOH). If you evaporate the water, you will have solid NaOH not Na2O.

We write that reaction as Na2O + H2O 2 NaOH

Page 28: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Why does one react and the other doesn’t?

Well, that’s chemistry. It’s not all that complicated but the answer won’t make much sense right now.

But, by the end of the course (Jan or June) it will make a lot of sense.

Page 29: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

NOW: STUDY HARD!!

15-30 minutes every night! After you do all your reading and homework, etc.

If you do, you won’t end up looking like this poor kitty the night before the test.

You should plan on studying hours for EVERY chemistry test. But it doesn’t all have to be done the night before.

Page 30: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

What’s in it for YOU?

Well, studies show that if you review something LATER THAT SAME DAY (and that’s called studying), you have an 80% better chance of actually remembering it.

Start Time

End Time

Page 31: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Helpful Hints Take this class one step at a time. Read and outline the chapter. If you

haven’t already started doing Chapter 3, you are already BEHIND! Don’t just copy what the book says into your notes. Rewrite it in your words, so you understand what you wrote.

Know the VOCAB from the book. If you don’t understand the words, you won’t know what I am talking about.

Page 32: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chemistry Builds on Itself

If you don’t understand what we are doing today, you aren’t going to get it tomorrow, because what we learn tomorrow will depend on what we learned today.

You can’t do Chapter 19 until you’ve learned 1-18. Google if you don’t understand something!

Ask questions! Work with each other! Form study groups!!

Page 33: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

It takes Time, and Work and EFFORT!

It took over 250 years of hard work by thousands of brilliant scientists to “figure out” Chemistry!

How are you going to learn it in 5 minutes or once a week?

Page 34: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Chemistry (or Schwartz) is too Hard or There’s Math in

Chemistry! It’s not. I’m not. But I can be if

you don’t do your job. Yeah, there is.

Algebra 1. Lots of it. Sometimes, this will

seem like your second math class.

Let’s do some math!This puzzle is UNSOLVABLE, but Chemistry is SOLVABLE, if you work.

Page 35: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Density Anyone remember the formula for density?

Anyone remember the “density heart?”

Page 36: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

d = m / VOMG, we just zoomed into Chapter 3

Density equals mass divided by volume. That’s what the formula is telling you. (Most of you probably already knew that).

Density has units of “g/mL” or “g/cm3” Mass has units of grams (g). Volume has units of milliliters (1 mL = 1cm3) But what does density really mean? Density tells you

how much 1 milliliter (volume) is going to weigh. One mL of water weighs 1 g. One mL of gold weighs

19.3 g.

Write this down and learn it!

Page 37: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

d = m / V If you know 2 of those 3 variables, you can

solve for (calculate) the remaining one. This is basic, basic algebra 1.

Rearrange the formula so that mass is by itself.

Rearrange the formula so that volume is by itself.

Page 38: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

d = m / V If you know 2 of those 3 variables, you can

solve for (calculate) the remaining one. This is basic, basic algebra 1.

Rearrange the formula so that mass is by itself.

Rearrange the formula so that volume is by itself.

m = V x d

Page 39: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

d = m / V If you know 2 of those 3 variables, you can

solve for (calculate) the remaining one. This is basic, basic algebra 1.

Rearrange the formula so that mass is by itself.

Rearrange the formula so that volume is by itself.

m = V x d

V = m / d

Page 40: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

d = m / V If you know 2 of those 3 variables, you can

solve for (calculate) the remaining one. This is basic, basic algebra 1.

Rearrange the formula so that mass is by itself.

Rearrange the formula so that volume is by itself.

Write these into your notes.

m = V x d

V = m / d

Page 41: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

d = m / V If you know 2 of those 3 variables, you can

solve for (calculate) the remaining one. This is basic, basic algebra 1.

Rearrange the formula so that mass is by itself.

Rearrange the formula so that volume is by itself.

You don’t need to memorize all 3. Memorize the top one and rearrange when you need one of the others!

m = V x d

V = m / d

Page 42: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

K = °C + 273 This formula converts Celcius temperature into Kelvin

temperature. This will be on the SOL. For some problems in Chemistry, we need to use Kelvin

temperature. We don’t use Fahrenheit temp. If this is first semester, it’s

probably about 80°F outside (maybe 30°F it is second semester). But you do need to know how to convert from Celcius to Kelvin (and vice versa).

What is the formula if you want °C by itself?

Page 43: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

K = °C + 273 This formula converts Celcius temperature into Kelvin

temperature. This will be on the SOL. For some problems in Chemistry, we need to use Kelvin

temperature. We don’t use Fahrenheit temp. If this is first semester, it’s

probably about 80°F outside (maybe 30°F it is second semester). But you do need to know how to convert from Celcius to Kelvin (and vice versa).

Answer: °C = K − 273

Page 44: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

Remember…

What you actually learned today is…

What you have left after you forgot all the other stuff I told you.

Learning requires real effort on your part. Some kids think “learning” means “teaching yourself.”

They are right. I can’t MAKE you learn. But, I am here to help you learn!

Page 45: Intro to Chemistry Chapter 1, section 3 and Chapter 2, and 2 formulas from Chapter 3 A Preview of Coming Attractions.

The End