Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture...

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Substances, Compounds and Mixtures

Transcript of Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture...

Page 1: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Substances, Compounds and Mixtures

Page 2: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are:

• Elements• Compounds• Substances• Mixtures

Page 3: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Element • A chemical element is a pure

chemical substance that cannot be broken down into a simpler substance. It is made of only one type of atom (we’ll discuss atoms more in the next unit).

Page 4: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Examples of Elements (SPONCH)

Sulfur

Nitrogen

Carbon

Hydrogen

Page 5: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts

• Compounds • A combination of two or more different elements (they must chemically combine to form a formula)

Page 6: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Examples of Compounds

Water Sodium hypochlorite - Bleach

sugar

NaClO- H2O

C12H22O11

Page 7: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Question Time!

Which of the following is a compound?

A.Copper wire

B.Frozen water

C.Pure gold coin

D.Aluminum Foil

Page 8: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Substance • Matter that has a defined

composition. • Also called a pure

substance.• Examples are distilled

water, table salt, fructose (fruit sugar)

Page 9: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Mixtures • A mix of two or more substances.

• If the substances experience a physical change, they can be separated by physical means, such as dissolution (to fall out of a solution), separation, etc…

• If the substances experience a chemical change, then they cannot be separated via physical means.

• There are two types:• Homogeneous• Heterogeneous

Page 11: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Homogeneous

Mixture

• The mixture is the same throughout. It is also called a solution.

• With food, this means each bite is exactly the same as the next bite.

Page 12: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Heterogeneous Mixture • A mixture that is NOT the same

throughout.• In food, this would be items

where one bite is different from the next.

Page 13: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Question Time!

Which of the following is a heterogeneous mixture?

A.Blood

B.Chocolate Ice Cream

C.Pasteurized Milk

D.Pulp-free Orange juice

Page 14: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Vocabulary for Liquid

Mixtures

• Mixtures in chemistry are often in the form of liquids. A solute is an object that is mixed into a larger amount of chemical, called a solvent. It will dissolve into the solvent.

• A colloid and suspension are two types of liquid mixtures. Colloids are homogeneous mixtures that do not settle out of solution on their own. Milk an example of one

• A suspension is a homogeneous mixture that will have its particles settle out when left alone. Iced Tea and Lemonade would be an example of this

Page 15: Substances, Compounds and Mixtures. Main Idea Supporting Facts The main concepts for this lecture are: Elements Compounds Substances Mixtures.

Main Idea Supporting Facts • Some ways to separate

mixtures?• Hand separation – If mixture is dry (like

sand and seashells), you can pick out the unlike parts by hand.

• Filtration – Using a filter system to separate smaller particles from larger ones (like washing of archaeological artifacts to rid them of dirt, silt, clay and sand)

• Distillation – boiling a liquid substance so the particles separate out their boiling parts (i.e., how we get gasoline from crude oil)

• Centrifugation – spinning a liquid in a small chamber until its components separate out via their densities (i.e., blood centrifugation)