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States of Matter and Mixtures and Solutions Carl Wozniak Northern Michigan University.

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Presentation on theme: "States of Matter and Mixtures and Solutions Carl Wozniak Northern Michigan University."— Presentation transcript:

1 States of Matter and Mixtures and Solutions Carl Wozniak Northern Michigan University

2 What is matter? Anything that has mass and occupies space An atom is the smallest unit of elemental matter Matter exists as solids, liquids, and gases (and also plasmas, Bose-Einstein condensates, and fermionic condensates) All matter can exist in all three states, temperature and pressure are the key factor determining the current state

3 Matter Matter can be a composed of a pure substance or be a mixture (A composition of two or more substances that are not chemically combined with each other and are capable of being separated. ) A mixture in which a solid is dissolved in a liquid is a solution. or a compound (A pure, macroscopically homogeneous substance consisting of atoms or ions of two or more different elements in definite proportions that cannot be separated by physical means.)

4 States of matter Elements and compounds can move from one physical state to another and not change. The compound water is made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. It has the same molecular structure whether it is a gas, liquid, or solid. Although its physical state may change, its chemical state remains the same. If you added another oxygen atom, you would make hydrogen peroxide. Its molecules would not be water anymore. That’s a chemical change.

5 States of matter Elements and compounds can move from one phase to another phase when special physical forces are present. If energy is added (like increasing the temperature or increasing pressure) or if energy is taken away (like freezing something or decreasing pressure) you have created a physical change.

6 States of matter One compound or element can move from phase to phase, but still be the same substance. You can see water vapor over a boiling pot of water. That vapor (or gas) can condense and become a drop of water. If you put that drop in the freezer, it would become a solid. No matter what phase it was in, it was always water. It always had the same chemical properties.

7 Solids So what is a solid? Solids are usually hard because their molecules have been packed together. The closer your molecules are, the harder you are. Solids have a definite shape, occupy a definite volume, are non- compressible, and have multiple free surfaces.

8 Solids In the same way that a solid holds its shape, the atoms inside of a solid are not allowed to move around too much. This is one of the physical characteristics of solids. Atoms and molecules in liquids and gases are bouncing and floating around, free to move where they want. The molecules in a solid are stuck. The atoms still spin and the electrons fly around, but the entire atom will not change position.

9 Solids Solids can be made up of many things. They can have pure elements or a variety of compounds inside. When you get more than one type of compound in a solid it is called a mixture. Most rocks are mixtures of many different compounds. Concrete is a good example of a manmade mixture.

10 Solids On the other end of the spectrum from a mixture is something called a crystal. When a solid is made up of a pure substance and forms slowly, it can become a crystal. Not all pure substances form crystals because it is a delicate process. The atoms are arranged in a regular repeating pattern called a crystal lattice. A crystal lattice is a very exact organization of atoms. A good example is carbon. A diamond is a perfect crystal lattice while the graphite arrangement is more random.

11 Liquids Liquids flow readily and take the shape of their container, occupy a definite volume, are non- compressible, have a single free surface, and find their own level. Liquids are an in-between state of matter. They can be found between the solid and gas states. They don't have to be made up of the same compounds. If you have a variety of materials in a liquid, it is called a solution.

12 Liquids One characteristic of a liquid is that it will fill up the shape of a container. If you pour some water in a cup, it will fill up the bottom of the cup first and then fill the rest, taking on the shape of the cup. It fills the bottom first because of gravity. The top part of a liquid will usually have a flat surface. That flat surface is because of gravity, too.

13 Liquids Another trait of liquids is that they are difficult to compress. When you compress something, you take a certain amount and force it into a smaller space. Solids are very difficult to compress and gases are very easy.

14 Gases  have no definite shape or volume,  have no free surfaces,  diffuse rapidly to fill a space uniformly,  can be compressed,  exert pressure on surfaces with which they come in contact,  and have a small mass for their volume. Gases move from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration (or higher pressure to lower pressure).

15 Gases Gases are random groups of atoms. In solids, atoms and molecules are compact and close together. Liquids have atoms a little more spread out. However, gases are really spread out and the atoms and molecules are full of energy. They are bouncing around constantly. Vapor and gas mean the same thing. The word vapor is used to describe gases that are usually found as liquids.

16 Solutions and Mixtures A mixture contains two or more materials that have not chemically combined You can physically separate mixtures by  Manual separation  Magnetic separation  Filtration  Crystallization  Distillation  Chromatography

17 Solutions and Mixtures Solutions are groups of molecules that are mixed up in a completely even distribution, that is, they are homogenous mixtures. Think of sugar in water vs. sand in water. Sugar dissolves and is spread throughout the glass of water. The sand sinks to the bottom. The sugar- water could be considered a solution. The sand- water is a mixture, but not a solution.

18 Solutions and Mixtures Solutions can be solids dissolved in liquids. They could also be gases dissolved in liquids (such as carbonated water). They can be gases in other gases and liquids in liquids. If you mix things up and they stay at an even distribution, it is a solution.

19 Solutions and Mixtures The solute is the substance to be dissolved. The solvent is the one doing the dissolving. Solubility is the ability of the solvent to dissolve the solute. Some things dissolve easier in one kind of substance than another. Sugar dissolves easily in water; oil does not. Water has a low solubility when it comes to oil.


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