Properties of Matter

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CLASSIFYING MATTER Section 2.1

Transcript of Properties of Matter

Page 1: Properties of Matter

CLASSIFYING MATTERSection 2.1

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What is Matter?

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Matter is…

…anything that takes up space (has volume) and has mass

Essentially… anything made of atoms

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Properties

All matter has different properties because of different structures/compositions

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Types of Matter

Pure Substances have a definite, fixed composition

Compositions of a Mixture can vary

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Pure Substances Two kinds: element and

compound

Elements cannot be broken down into simpler substances

Smallest particle of an element is an atom

118 different elements = 118 different atoms

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Pure Substances

Compounds are made up of two or more elements chemically bonded together

Elements have SYMBOLS!

Compounds have FORMULAS!

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Pure Substances

The properties of a compounds ARE OFTEN DIFFERENT from the properties of the elements that make up that compound!

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Mixtures

Composition of a mixture can vary

Example: In a mixture of A, B, and C… you could have a little more A and a little less C, or any other combination.

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Types of Mixtures

Heterogeneous mixtures have obviously different parts

Homogeneous mixtures (aka. solutions) have multiple substances evenly distributed

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Other Important Terms

Solution: particles are too small to be filtered or scatter light; will not separate into layers

Suspension: cloudy (scatter light); large particles will separate into layers over time

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Other Important Terms

Colloid: mostly small particles, but some larger-sized ones

Colloids do not separate into layers

Colloids do scatter light

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PHYSICAL PROPERTIESSection 2.2

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Properties of Matter

Chemical Properties can only be observed as the matter is changing into a different substance

Physical Properties can be observed using touch, smell, sight, or measurement; substance does not need to be changed

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Physical Properties

Viscosity – resistance to flow (increases at cold temperatures, decreases at warm temperatures

Conductivity – ability to transfer heat or electricity

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Physical Properties

Malleability – ability to be hammered into wires or sheets

Hardness – which substances can scratch which other substances?

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Physical Properties

Melting Point

Boiling Point

Density = mass / volume

Units for density: g/cm3

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Separating Mixtures

You can separate most mixtures based on their physical properties

Filtration (based on size of particles)

Distillation (based on boiling points)

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Separating Mixtures

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Physical Changes Properties change,

but material remains the same

Tye-dye Slicing Mixing or dissolving

Changes in STATE are physical changes

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CHEMICAL PROPERTIESSection 2.3

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Chemical Properties

Flammability

Reactivity

Toxicity

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Chemical Changes

Any change in which one chemical substance changes into another chemical substance

Evidence: Color change Gas produced Precipitate produced

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“Precipitate”

A solid that forms when two liquids react and separates out of the liquids

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STATES OF MATTERSection 3.1

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States of Matter

Solid Liquid Gas

Different states refer to…

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States of Matter

Different states refer to…

1. Whether shapes/volumes are fixed or variable

2. Arrangement of atoms

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Solids

Definite shape Definite volume

Atoms are packed so tightly they cannot move, only vibrate

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Liquids

Definite volume No definite shape

Atoms are packed tightly together, but can flow

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Gases

No definite shape No definite volume

Atoms are spread far apart and move quickly and randomly

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Changes in State…

…are physical changes.

…occur as molecules speed up or slow down because of changes in temperature.

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Changes in State

Evaporation

Condensation

Melting

Freezing

Sublimation

Deposition

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TEST PREPOctober 21, 2011

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Are you ready for the test? Have you read all the textbook

sections thoroughly?

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Are you ready for the test? Have you gone, little-by-little, back

through your notes each night?

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Are you ready for the test? Have you used the notes on

SlideShare?

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Are you ready for the test? Have you practiced with the problems

in the back of the chapter?

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Are you ready for the test? Have you re-written some difficult

terms/definitions or made flash cards?

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Are you ready for the test? Have you checked the correct answers

to your ClassMarker quiz?

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Are you ready for the test? Did you understand how to correctly

measure and calculate density in the lab?

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Scores 6-7 : very well prepared

5: getting close; average preparedness; still work to be done

3-4: TROUBLE! much more work to be done

0-2: WHAT THE HECK HAVE YOU BEEN DOING FOR TWO WEEKS???

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Element, Compound, Homogeneous, or Heterogeneous? Carbon

Sucrose (C12H22O11) Sugar dissolved in water Air Steel A leaf A crayon (without the paper) Silver Pure water Shampoo

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Physical or Chemical Property?

Flammability Viscosity Melting Point Density Reactivity Conductivity Boiling Point Hardness Malleability Toxicity

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Physical or Chemical Change? When you shake a soda, it foams out the

top when opened. Wood is burned in a campfire for heat. Silver polish reacts with the dirt stuck to

your jewelry and removes it. Cook eggs and bacon for breakfast. A sample of gold is flattened into a sheet of

gold foil. Carbohydrates and proteins are broken

down by your cells for energy. Alcohol boils and is collected in a new

container.

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Scores 24-27 : very well prepared

18-23: getting close; average preparedness; still work to be done

12-17: TROUBLE! much more work to be done

0-11: WHAT THE HECK HAVE YOU BEEN DOING FOR TWO WEEKS???