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Bell Ringer (Feb 13) *Take out a sheet of paper
*Name in right hand corner *Bell Ringers across top line *Why is it important to understand matter and how it changes?
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
(Page 99) Essential Question: How do we differentiate types of matter?
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous
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1. Pure Substance *A substance that is made up of only one type of molecule (the smallest part of a substance that’s still the substance). NO NO
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**Molecules: *Elements: gold (Au), silver (Ag),
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**Molecules: *Elements: carbon C oxygen O hydrogen H
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**Molecules: *Elements (sodium Na, Chlorine Cl)
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**Molecules: Pizza – NO!!!!!!!!! *Why Not???
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1. Pure Substance *Can’t be changed into or broken down into other matter by physical changes
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous
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* Elements – a substance made up of only 1 kind of atom
Gold chlorine sodium sulfur
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118 Elements Pure Substances
Elements – substances made up of one or more of the same kind of atom e.g. – oxygen(O), gold(Au), chlorine(Cl), aluminum (Al)
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Metals – shiny, conduct heat and electricity well, and can be shaped e
* Metals – shiny, conduct heat and electricity well, and can be shaped e.g. – aluminum, gold, iron, lead, nickel Gold sodium Nickel Lead
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*Non-metals – not shiny and do not conduct heat or electricity well e.g. – hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen
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*Metalloids – has properties of both metals and non-metals
Examples – boron, silicon, arsenic
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How do we identify elements?
*By their chemical symbol Lead – Pb Nitrogen - N Sulfur - S
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous
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e.g. – water (H2O) salt (NaCl) alcohol (C2H6O) sugar(C12H22O11)
Pure Substances Compounds – substances made up of two or more elements through a chemical reaction, or change e.g. – water (H2O) salt (NaCl) alcohol (C2H6O) sugar(C12H22O11)
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*Compound: Sugar C12 O22 H11 Carbon C Oxygen O Hydrogen H
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**Compound: Salt (NaCl)
(Sodium Na Chlorine Cl)
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Compounds Elements: Compounds: Oxygen (O) Water (H2O) Hydrogen (H) Carbon (C) Sugar (C12H22O11) Carbon dioxide (CO2) Chlorine (Cl) Sodium (Na) Salt (NaCl) Iron (Fe) Rust (Fe2O2)
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Bell Ringer (2/14) Explain how you can tell the difference between an element and a compound.
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Essential Question: How do we differentiate types of matter?
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous
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Mixtures *A combination of two or more substances that are physically combined
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Mixtures *Can be separated by physical changes
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous
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evenly spread or mixed through the mixture
Mixtures Homogeneous *the substances are evenly spread or mixed through the mixture *examples: Chocolate milk Kool-aid, soapy water
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Mixtures *Solutions: a mixture where one substance is dissolved in another substance (salt water, tea)
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogeneous Heterogeneous
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*the substances are not mixed or spread evenly through the mixture
Mixtures Heterogeneous *the substances are not mixed or spread evenly through the mixture *examples: pizza, sandwich, soup
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3. Acids & Bases *Acids – solution with pH level below 7 Examples – vinegar, milk, lemon juice *Neutral – pH exactly 7 (pure water) *Bases – solution with pH level above 7 Examples – baking soda, bleach, blood
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Acidic (below 7) Neutral (exactly 7) Basic (above 7)
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Lemon Juice (2) – Highly acidic Black Coffee (5) – Slightly acidic
Highly Slightly Slightly Highly Acidic Acidic Basic Basic Lemon Juice (2) – Highly acidic Black Coffee (5) – Slightly acidic Baking Soda (9) – Slightly basic Bleach (13) – Highly basic
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3. Acids & Bases **Salt – the chemical change when an acid solution is mixed with a base solution
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Pure Substances and Mixtures
Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Homogenous Heterogeneous
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Conclusion Quick Write – Explain why salt is considered a pure substance but salt water is not
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