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Published byDoddy Tanuwidjaja Modified over 6 years ago
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Insert Date AIM: Basic Chemistry Do Now: Homework:
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Matter All things have matter!!! Anything that takes up space and has a mass is considered matter.
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Basic Chemistry Element – a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical reactions Example: Oxygen
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Common Elements Carbon Nitrogen
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An Element is an Atom Atom – smallest unit of matter Contains:
1. Protons – positive charge 2. Neutrons – no charge 3. Electrons – negative charge
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Mixture Vs. Compound A mixture contains two different elements that do not chemically combine A mixture becomes a compound when the different elements combine to make a new compound. - Can be separated by physical means - Can only separate through chemical reaction
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Structural Formula Shows how each element is arranged Water Glucose
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Molecular Formula Indicates which elements are present and how many of each of them are in the compound. Water - H2O …. has 2 H and 1 O Methane – CH4 …. Has 1 C and 4 H It’s the recipe for the compound!
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Physical Change A physical change is a change in appearance.
The identity does not change.
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Chemical Change Compounds are broken and the atoms left over can form new bonds to make new compounds. The identity changes
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A Chemical Reaction CH4 + 2O2 CO2 + 2H2O CH4 and 2O2 = reactants
they will react with one another CO2 and 2H2O = products they are made as a result of the chemical reaction.
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Let’s look at this equation
Photosynthesis Which are the reactants and which are the products.
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Two Types of Bonds Ionic Bonds – one atom donates an electron to the other atom (metal and non-metal) Covalent Bonds – two atoms share an electron. (Two non-metals) Ionic Covalent
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Important Groups On Molecules
These are known as functional groups: Acids – Alcohols – Also called a Hydroxide because there is Hydrogen (Hydr) and Oxygen (oxide)
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Acids and Bases Acids – have a Hydrogen atom bonded to another atom.
HCl H + Cl Bases – have a hydroxide group bonded to another atom. NaOH Na + OH When either is dissolved in water, you are left with just the Hydrogen or just the Hydroxide.
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Neutralization Neutralization occurs when you have equal amounts of an acid and base The products result in: 1. Salts 2. Water Example: a wasp sting is a base. It can be neutralized with an acid like lemon juice.
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Think about… Your pool at home. It needs to be a certain pH. (Close to neutral) We have a pH scale to measure this
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pH Indicator Strips Indicators are substances that change color depending on what the pH level is. Examples : Litmus Paper Phenolphthalein
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