AP Chemistry

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AP Chemistry Introduction

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AP Chemistry. Introduction. matter : anything having mass and volume. the amount of matter in an object. mass :. the pull of gravity on an object. weight :. volume :. the space an object occupies. units: L, dm 3 , mL, cm 3. conversions: 1 L = 1 dm 3 ; 1 mL = 1 cm 3. state of matter :. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of AP Chemistry

Page 1: AP Chemistry

AP Chemistry

Introduction

Page 2: AP Chemistry

matter: anything having mass and volume mass: weight:

volume: units: L, dm3, mL, cm3

state of matter:

the amount of matter in an object the pull of gravity on an object

the space an object occupies

solid, liquid, or gas conversions: 1 L = 1 dm3; 1 mL = 1 cm3

atom: a basic building block of matter -- ~100 diff. kinds

Page 3: AP Chemistry

Elements contain only one type of atom.

(a) monatomic elements consist of “unbonded,” identical atoms

e.g.,

(b) polyatomic elements consist of several identical atoms bonded together

-- diatomic elements:

-- others:

Fe, Al, Cu, He

H2 O2 Br2 F2 I2 N2 Cl2

P4 S8 “7 7 7”

Brok

en D

ream

s Bl

vd.

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(c) allotropes: different forms of the same element in the same state of matter

OXYGEN CARBON

oxygen gas

ozone

elementalcarbon graphite

diamond buckyball

(O2)

(O3)

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molecule: a neutral group of bonded atoms

Description Chemical Symbol Model

1 oxygen atom

1 oxygen molecule

2 unbonded oxygen atoms1 phosphorus

atom1 phosphorus

molecule4 unbonded phosphorus

atoms

O

O2

2 O

P

P4

Elements may consist of… either molecules or unbonded atoms.

4 P

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Chemical symbols for elementsappear on the periodic table;

only the first letteris capitalized.

He2

4.003

Ne10

20.180

Ar18

39.948

Kr36

83.80

Xe54

131.29

Rn86

(222)

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Compoundscontain two or more different types of atoms.-- have properties that differ from those of their constituent elements

e.g., Na (sodium): Cl2 (chlorine):

explodes in water poisonous gas

table salt (NaCl)

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Every sample of NaCl tastes the same,melts at the same temp., and is

39.3% Na and 60.7% Cl by mass.

Compound Composition

All samples of a given compoundhave the same composition by mass.

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A 550. g sample of chromium(III) oxide (Cr2O3)has 376 g Cr. How many grams of Cr and Oare in a 212 g sample of Cr2O3?

68.4% Crg 550Cr g 376

% Cr =and

31.6% O

Cr:

O:

212 g (0.684) = 145 g Cr 212 g (0.316) = 67 g O

chromium(III) oxide

(New sample has same composition.)

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composition:

copper: water:

Properties

Chemistry tries to relatethe microscopic andmacroscopic worlds.

what the matter is made of

many Cu atoms many “threesomes” of2 H’s and 1 O

describe the matter. e.g., what it looks like, smells like, how it behaves

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States of Matter LIQUID SOLID GAS

( ( ) )( ( ) )

( ( ) )( ( ) )

( ( ) )

( ( ) )( ( ) )

( ( ) )( ( ) )

( ( ) )

( ( ) )( ( ) )

( ( ) )( ( ) )

( ( ) )

vibrating translating;close together

translating quickly;far apart

vapor: the gaseous state of a substance thatgenerally is found as a solid or liquid

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Changes in State Energy put into system:

Energy removed from system:

LIQUID GASSOLID

freezing condensation

deposition

sublimation

boilingmelting

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Classifying Matter

(Pure) Substances have a fixed composition and fixed properties.

ELEMENTS COMPOUNDS e.g., e.g., Fe, N2, S8, U H2O, NaCl, HNO3

-- they have a single chemical formula

sulfur (S8) sodium chloride (NaCl)

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Mixtures contain two or more substancesmixed together.

-- have varying compositionand varying properties

-- The substances are NOT chemically bonded; they retain their individual properties.

Tea, orangejuice, oceans,

and air aremixtures.

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Two Types of Mixtureshomogeneous: (or solution)

sample has same composition and propertiesthroughout; evenly mixed at theparticle level

e.g.,

alloy: a homogeneous mixture of metals

e.g.,

Kool Aid

bronze (Cu + Sn) brass (Cu + Zn) pewter (Pb + Sn)

salt water

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Two Types of Mixtures (cont.)heterogeneous:

different composition and properties in thesame sample; unevenly mixed

e.g.,

suspension: settles over time

e.g.,

tossed salad

raisin bran

paint snow globes

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MATTER

Chart for Classifying Matter

PURE SUBSTANCE MIXTURE

ELEMENT COMPOUND

HOMOGENEOUS

HETEROGENEOUS

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Separating Mixtures involvesphysical means, orphysical changes.

1. sorting:

2. filtration:

by color,shape,texture,etc.

by particlesize

-- No chemical reactions are needed because…

substances are NOT bonded.

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Separating Mixtures (cont.)

3. magnetism:

4. chromatography:

one substancemust contain iron

some substances dissolvemore easily than others

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Separating Mixtures (cont.)

5. density: “sink vs. float”; perhaps use a centrifuge

decant: to pouroff the liquid

blood after high-speed centrifuging

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heat source

thermometer

water in(cooler)

water out(warmer)

more-volatile substance

mixture

condenser

more-volatilesubstance, nowcondensed

(i.e., the onewith the lowerboiling point)

Separating Mixtures (cont.) 6. distillation: different boiling points

Volatile substances evaporate easily.