Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEileen Gibbs Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chemistry I Mr. Patel SWHS
2
Continue to Learn Major Elements and Symbols Properties of Matter (2,1, 2,2, 2,3) Physical and Chemical Changes (2.1, 2.4) Inter-/Intra-molecular Forces States of Matter (13.2, 13.2, 13.3) Kinetics/KMT, Phase Change (13.1, 13.4)
3
Remember matter is anything that has mass and occupies volume. Matter is described using properties that are extensive or intensive properties.
4
Extensive Property – a property that depends on the amount of matter in a sample. (Changes with amount) Mass – measure of the amount of matter an object contains Volume – measure of the space taken up Other examples: energy, weight, length, area
5
Intensive Property – a property that does NOT depend on the amount of matter Density – D = mass/volume matter per unit volume Other examples: hardness, melting/freezing point, concentration, viscosity
6
1. The Boiling point of water is 100 O C. 2. The mass if 300 kg. 3. The length is 30 m. 4. The density of water is 1.0 g/mL. 1. Intensive 2. Extensive 3. Extensive 4. Intensive
7
All matter can be divided into substances and mixtures Substance – uniform and definite composition Every sample of a substance has identical intensive properties. Why?
8
Copper Kettle
9
Matter Anything that has mass and volume Substance Constant Composition; All particles identical Ex: Water, Helium Mixture Variable Composition; 2 or more substances Ex: Sand, Soil Physically Separate
10
Substances can be classified as elements or compounds Element – simplest form of matter with unique set of properties (all atoms same) Ex: Gold, Hydrogen, Oxygen (on periodic table) Compound – two or more elements chemically combined in fixed ratios Ex: Water, salt, baking soda Compounds can be chemically separated to elements
12
Matter Anything that has mass and volume Substance Constant Composition; All particles identical Ex: Water, Helium Mixture Variable Composition; 2 or more substances Ex: Sand, Soil Element Made up of identical atoms; on Periodic Table Ex: Zinc, Uranium Compound Made up of 2 or more elements; combined chemically Ex: Carbon dioxide Physically Separate Chemically
13
Mixture – a physical blend of two or more components (substances) Heterogeneous Mixture – the composition is not uniform throughout Ex: soil, chicken noodle soup Homogeneous Mixture – (solution) composition is uniform throughout Ex: salt water, alloys (solid in solid)
14
Mixtures can be separated physically Filtration – solid from liquid Distillation – liquid from liquid or solid
15
Steel = Iron + Carbon
17
Matter Anything that has mass and volume Substance Constant Composition; All particles identical Ex: Water, Helium Mixture Variable Composition; 2 or more substances Ex: Sand, Soil Element Made up of identical atoms; on Periodic Table Ex: Zinc, Uranium Compound Made up of 2 or more elements; combined chemically Ex: Carbon dioxide Physically Separate Chemically Heterogeneous Uneven Distribution; easy to separate Ex: Vegetable Soup Homogenous Uniform Distribution; called solution Ex: Tap water, Steel
18
Physical Property – measured properties that do not change the nature of the sample Ex: Boiling Point, Density, Mass Physical Change – some properties may change but the composition of the material does not change Ex: Boiling, Freezing, Cutting, Splitting Can be Reversible or Irreversible
20
Physical Changes do not involve chemical reactions No Breaking or Forming Chemical Bonds Substance is the same before and after the change
21
Chemical Property – the ability of a substance to undergo a chemical reaction Ex: Flammability, Combustibility, decomposition Chemical Change – the composition of matter will always change Ex: Burning, exploding, reacting, rusting, rotting Also called a chemical reaction
23
Clues for a chemical reaction: 1. Transfer of Energy – heat, sound, light 2. Color Change 3. Gas Production 4. Formation of Precipitate – solid that settles out of a liquid mixture Don’t confuse for a physical change
25
Law of Conservation of Mass – mass is neither created nor destroyed; it is only transformed. The mass before a reaction must always equal the mass after a reaction
27
1. Burning Gasoline 2. Evaporation of Water 3. Stripping a Copper Wire 4. Mold Growing on Yogurt 5. Alka-Setlzer tablets 1. Chemical 2. Physical 3. Physical 4. Chemical 5. Chemical
28
INTERMOLECULAR FORCESINTRAMOLECULAR FORCES Forces between individual molecules Strong by Numbers Ex: Hydrogen Bonding, Dipole forces, Dispersion Forces Contribute to Physical Changes Forces within a specific, individual molecule Very Strong Ex: Ionic Bond, Covalent Bond, Metallic Bond Contribute to Chemical Changes
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.