Units of Measurement

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Units of Measurement Meter m Liter L Celsius C

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Meter m Liter L Celsius C. Units of Measurement. Mass is the amount of matter, weight is a measure of the gravitational pull on matter. SI Units. Practice In each pair below, circle the larger. Basic SI Units. Metric Conversion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Units of Measurement

Page 1: Units of Measurement

Units of MeasurementMeter m

Liter L

Celsius C

Page 2: Units of Measurement

Mass is the amount of matter, weight is a measure of the gravitational pull on matter

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SI UnitsPrefix Symbol Scientific

notationFactor Example

Mega M 1 x 106 1,000,000 megagram (Mg)

Kilo k 1 x 103 1,000 kilometer (km)

Hecto h 1 x 102 100 hectoliter (hL)

Deka da or (D) 1 x 101 10 dekagram (Dg)

BASE UNIT 1 x 100 1 meter

Deci d 1 x 10-1 .1 deciliter (dL)

Centi c 1 x 10-2 .01 centimeter (cm)

Milli m 1 x 10-3 .001 milligram (mg)

Micro u 1 x 10-6 .000001 microgram (ug)

Nano n 1 x 10-9 .000000001 nanometer (nm)

Pico p 1 x 10-12 .000000000001 picogram (pg)

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PracticeIn each pair below, circle the larger

Millimeter Centimeter

picometer Micrometer

kilogram Hectogram

deciliter millileter

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Basic SI UnitsQuantity Base unitLength meter (m)Mass gram (g)Time second (s)Volume Liter (L)Temperature Kelvin (K) or Celsius (C)Amount of substance mole (mol)Heat & Energy joule (J)

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Metric Conversion

1.) 3.45 cm= Dm

king henry Died by drinking chocolate milkK h D base d c m

0.00345

243.52.) 2.435 g= cg

2.35

3.) 23.8 mL= L

4.) 14.8 km= m

5.) 23.5 cg= dg

0.0238

14800

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TemperatureUse both the Kelvin and Celsius scale, to convert

Celsius + 273 = Kelvin

Kelvin -273 = Celsius

373 K = °C

20°C = K293

100

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Volume: measured in cubic centimeters (cm3) or liters

• 1 liter (L) = 1 cubic decimeter (dm3) = 1000 millileters (mL)• 1 mL= 1 cm3

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• Volume can be measure by Length x x or the Water Displacement method

width height

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• Volume can be measure by Length x width x height or the Water Displacement method

Know the relationship between the following volume units…

L = mL = cm3 (or cc in medical lingo) 1 1000 1000

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Density

• Is the ratio of mass per unit of volume. How much matter is packed into a given amount of space

• Density = mass ÷ volume

• D= M V

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• The Density of a substance stays regardless of the size of the sample. For example: if you cut a block of copper in half, you have decreased both the mass and volume, the ratio of the 2 stays the same. This is called an Intensive Physical Property.

Constant

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• The appropriate units of density are:

• for solids• for liquids

g/cm3

g/mL

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Example problems:

• A sample of aluminum metal has a mass of 8.4g. The volume of the sample is 3.1 cm3. Calculate the Density of aluminum.

D = M =V

8.4 3.1

=2.7 g/cm3 2 sig figs

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Example problems:

• Diamond has a density of 3.26 g/cm3. What is the mass of a diamond that has a volume of 0.350 cm3?

D = 3.26 g/cm3

M = ? V = 0.350 cm3

D = M V

3.26 g/cm3 x 0.350 cm3 = 1.14 g3 sig figs

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Example problems:

• What is the volume of a sample of liquid mercury that has a mass of 76.2 g, given that the density of mercury is 13.6 g/mL?

V = ? M = 76.2 g D = 13.6 g/mL

D= MV

76.2 g 13.3 g/mL = 5.7293 mL = 5.73 mL

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Reliable Measurements

• refers to the closeness of the measure value is to the , or real, value.

• refers to how a series of measurements are to one another.

Accuracy

Actual

Precision Close

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• is calculated by subtracting the value from the value.

ErrorExperimental accepted

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• The is the ratio of an error to an accepted value.

percent error

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% error = error x 100 = accepted value – experimental value x 100 accepted value accepted value

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Example

• An experiment finds the density of lead to be 10.95 g/cm3. The literature value for the density of lead is 13.34 g/cm3.

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The error: accepted value – experimental value=

• 13.34 – 10.95 =

An experiment finds the density of lead to be 10.95 g/cm3. The literature value for the density of lead is 13.34 g/cm3.

2.39

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The error: accepted value – experimental value=• 13.34 – 10.95 = 2.39

The % error: error x 100 % = accepted value

2.39 x 100 % =13.34

17.9 %

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Practice

• Sara’s lab shows the atomic mass of aluminum to be 28.9. What is her percent error if the accepted value is 27.0?

28.9 – 27.0 = 1.90

7.04%1.90/27.0 x 100% =

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Practice

• What is the percent error in a measurement of the boiling point of bromine if the textbook value is 60.8 °C and the lab value is 40.6 °C?

60.8 °C – 40.6 °C = 20.2 °C

20.2 °C / 60.8 °C x 100% = 33.2%