Solid Liquid Gas Definite shape, Definite volume lowest energy

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Matter and Change Ch. 2.
Advertisements

Unit 2: “Matter and Change”
7th Grade Chemistry.
Matter ~anything that takes up space and has mass ~it normally comes in 3 phases Solid Liquid Gas Definite shape, Definite volume lowest energy No definite.
Chapter 2 “Matter and Change”
Classifying Matter Classifications Matter can be classified as an element, compound or mixture Matter can be classified as an element, compound or mixture.
Physical science jones
Classification of Matter. Matter Matter: Anything that has mass and volume (takes up space) 3 phases of matter.
Classification of Matter. Matter Matter: Anything that has mass and volume 3 phases of matter.
Matter and Change. Matter Anything that has mass and takes up space. Everything is made up of matter.
Matter ~anything that takes up space and has mass ~it normally comes in 3 phases Solid Liquid Gas Definite shape, Definite volume lowest energy No definite.
ANYTHING WITH MASS AND VOLUME Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous.
Some elements can have molecules as their smallest component as long as the molecule is made up entirely of the same atom as long as the molecule is made.
Matter and Properties Big idea: Atoms are building blocks of matter, all substances have specific properties, and matter can be a pure substance or a mixture.
Classifying Matter Compounds -substances made up entirely of the same molecule. molecule- 2 or more atoms bonded together. molecule- 2 or more atoms.
Chapter 2: Matter and Change
The Classification of Matter …it matters (Ch. 2).
Matter. Stuff that objects are made of Anything that has mass and volume 3 Types –Elements –Compounds –Mixtures.
Unit 4 Section 1 Notes What is Matter?. Chemistry Chemistry: The study of matter and how it changes Examples of how we use chemistry everyday:  Cell.
Classifying Matter Classifications Matter can be classified as an element, compound or mixture Matter can be classified as an element, compound or mixture.
Who Wants to Pass Science 9?
Matter Chapter 2.1 & 2.2 Notes. What is Matter? Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space Air is matter because it has mass and takes up space;
Matter CHAPTER 2. Classifying Matter SECTION 1 Matter  Matter: anything that has mass and takes up space (this includes air)  Chemistry: the study.
Classification of Matter
Properties of Matter Chapter 2 Wrap-up.
Introduction to Chemistry
Vocab # volume: the amount of space an object takes up. 2
Chapter 1B Notes matter- anything that has mass and takes up space mass- the amount of matter in an object substance- matter with a definite and uniform.
Physical & Chemical Properties of Matter
Aim: How do we classify matter?
The study of matter and how matter can change.
Matter Chapter 2.
Matter Chapter 2.
Matter and Change Chapter 3.
Chapter 2: Matter and Change
EQ: What are the properties of matter and how does matter change?
Chapter 3 Matter.
Chemistry: Introduction to and Classification of Matter
Matter Chapter 2.
Introduction to Chemistry
Zumdahl • Zumdahl • DeCoste
Chapter 3 Matter.
Chapter 2: Matter and Change
Classification of matter
Matter Chapter 2.
Chapter 2 Properties of Matter.
What’s The Matter? Intro to Chemistry The study of matter!
Matter and Change Chapter 1.
Matter Chapter 2.
Classification of Matter
Matter & Change Chapter 3.
7.P.2A.4 Construct explanations for how compounds are classified as ionic (metal bonded to nonmetal) or covalent (nonmetals bonded together) using chemical.
Matter Chapter 2.
MATTER.
Matter I. What is Matter?.
Matter.
Matter: Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space.
Review.
Physical Properties of Matter
Classification of Matter.
Matter.
What’s The Matter? Intro to Chemistry The study of matter!
Department of Petroleum and Mining
MATTER ANYTHING WITH MASS AND VOLUME.
Chemistry Matter and Change.
Matter and Its Properties
Matter and Change Chapter 1.
Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures
Chemistry Joke What do you call iron blowing in the wind? Febreeze!
Elements and Compounds
Presentation transcript:

Matter ~anything that takes up space and has mass ~Matter normally comes in 3 phases Solid Liquid Gas Definite shape, Definite volume lowest energy No definite shape, definite volume mid-level energy No definite shape, no definite volume high energy

Plasma “4th phase of matter” Most common phase of matter in the universe. Extremely high energy. Commonly found in stars, can be created naturally by lightning on Earth and the hottest part of a flame.

Chemical and Physical Properties and Changes

Physical Properties Any property that can be tested without changing the chemical make-up of the substance. For Example- mass, weight, density, volume, color, shape, texture, melting point, and boiling point. Changing phases does not change the chemical make-up of a substance. When water freezes to ice, it is still water (H2O).

Chemical Properties Any property that can only be tested by changing the chemical make-up of the substance. Flammability, chemical reactivity, and ability to rust. A chemical change always involves a change in energy (either endothermic or exothermic).

A quick statement You can tell a chemical reaction has occurred if the products are different from the reactants! If there is no change it is NOT a reaction! e.g. ice melting is NOT a reaction, it is a physical change!

Observations that indicate a Chemical Change has taken place Production of a gas (bubbles) Change in color Formation of a precipitate Precipitate- solid falling out of solution Evolution of energy Change in temperature Release of light etc.

Chemical or Physical Changes are when you change a chemical or physical property cutting a piece of ice in half physical change activating an instant ice pack (make it cold) chemical change melting ice baking flour, sugar, egg and water together

Physical Properties can be used to separate mixtures depending on the shape and size you may be able to separate them with a filter, or a centrifuge solutions require distillation (boiling substances off one at a time) chemical properties could also be used to separate mixtures

Only chemical properties can be used to separate compounds the atoms are bonded together so you must break these bonds to separate the molecules to atoms or smaller molecules. If you pass an electric current through water you will separate it into H2 and O2 this is called electrolysis

Classifications Matter can be classified as an element, compound or mixture Elements- substances consisting of entirely the same atom. Compounds- substances consisting of entirely the same molecule. Mixtures- elements and/ or compounds next to each other

Elements There are 90 naturally occurring atoms on Earth about only 40 of those can be found naturally in elemental form Hydrogen, copper, gold, magnesium, lead, oxygen, nitrogen, helium, etc. Elements are represented by a 1-2 letter symbol The first must always be a capital letter, and the second (if present) is lower case.

Common element symbols Fe Au Cl H Cu C Ag oxygen- iron- gold- chlorine- hydrogen- copper- carbon- silver- *notice, that this is not written as FE, make that 2nd letter lower case not a small capital. It is also incorrect to write Ag A complete alphabetical list is located in the front cover of your book

Korean Periodic Table

We will not have to memorize the entire periodic table However you will be responsible to know all element symbols with an atomic number 1-36. (Hydrogen to Krypton) and Silver (Ag), Gold (Au), Mercury (Hg), Tin (Sn), Iodine (I), Uranium (U), Plutonium (Pu), and Lead (Pb) You don’t have to remember where they go on the periodic table or their information, only the symbol and name.

Elements you need to know

Compounds -substances made up entirely of the same molecule. molecule- 2 or more atoms bonded together. these are represented by chemical formulas element symbols and subscript numbers. H2O hydrogen (2 of them) oxygen subscript numbers mean there are that many of the atom it is directly behind. If there is no subscript number then 1 is implied. water, ammonia, glass, methane and limestone

Here is where capitalization becomes really important 1 carbon, 2 oxygen carbon dioxide ( a gas) 2 cobalt atoms cobalt is a metal

Some elements can have molecules as their smallest component as long as the molecule is made up entirely of the same atom The oxygen we breathe is not 1 oxygen atom, it is O2 When 2 atoms are joined like in the above case, it is called a diatomic element The 7 diatomic elements are hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine

7 diatomic elements

Allotropes allotrope -one of the different molecular forms of an element oxygen has 2 allotropes O2 and O3 (ozone) carbon has several allotropes graphite, diamond, buckyball (found in soot)

Mixtures compounds and/or elements mixed together but not bonded together heterogeneous mixture- different throughout or chunky granite, orange juice with pulp, Italian dressing homogeneous mixture- even throughout milk and saltwater Solution really well mixed homogeneous mixtures

Breakdown of classification