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Published byMyra Goodman Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 2
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2.1
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Pure Substances Elements Compounds Mixtures Solutions, Suspensions and Colloids
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Matter that always has exactly the same composition Every sample of a substance has the same properties because a it has a fixed composition. Ex: salt, sugar, flour 2 Types 1. Elements 2. Compounds
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Cannot be broken done into simpler substances fixed composition because contains only one type of atom No two elements contain the same type of atom Atom = smallest particle of an element
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Gold Aluminum Carbon Sodium
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Made from two or more simpler substances Contains two or more elements in a fixed proportion Can be broken down into its simpler substances (either elements or other compounds) Properties of a compound differ from those substances from which it is made
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Sodium Chloride Sodium: soft, highly reactive metal Chlorine: greenish colored gas, can be toxic
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Liquid Petroleum Gas (mixture of propane and butane gas) Made-up of carbon and hydrogen. Both gases More reactive than diesel, thus spark ignition
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Petrol Diesel (mixture of hydrocarbons) Made up of carbon and hydrogen Both Gases Does not burn as easily as gasoline thus air is compressed in cylinder and creates higher temperatures
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Pure Substances: same properties, uniform composition Elements: Fixed composition, contains one type of atom Compounds: two or more elements in a fixed proportion
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Properties of mixtures can vary because the composition is not fixed 2 Types: Heterogeneous and Homogeneous
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Parts of mixture are different from one another Ex: salsa, salad, sand
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Substances are so evenly distributed it can hard to distinguish them Ex: stainless steel, made of iron, chromium and nickel Swimming pool, water at the shallow end is the same as the water at the deep end
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Size of particles in a mixture effect the properties Based on the size of the largest particle a mixture can be classified as a solution, suspension or a colloid
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When substances dissolve and form a homogeneous mixture Ex: tap water, lemonade Can see light through these solutions Particles are small so light passes through without being scattered in all directions Particles will not settle out but can be filtered out
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Heterogeneous mixture that separates into layers over time Suspensions are cloudy because larger particles can scatter light Ex: Muddy water, sawdust in air
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Contains some particles that are intermediate (between solution and suspension) Do not separate into layers Cannot filter out particles Scatters light Ex: Fog, milk
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2.2
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Characteristic that can be observed or measured without changing the composition (make-up) of a substance Viscosity, conductivity, malleability, hardness, melting point, boiling point and density
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Resistance to flowing Greater the viscosity the slower the liquid Thin liquids have a low viscosity Ex: Honey vs. soda Heating up a liquid lowers its viscosity Ex: oil
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Ability to let heat flow Materials with high conductivity are called conductors Ex: Metals
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Resistance to scratching The hard the material the less likely it can be scratched and the more likely it will scratch something else Ex: Diamond Drill Tips
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Melting Point: temperature a substance goes from a solid to a liquid Boiling point: temperature at which a substance boils
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Amount of matter in an object Ratio of the mass to volume Different substances have different densities D = M/V
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Used to identify materials Choose materials for a specific purpose Separate materials in a mixture Filtration and Distillation
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Separates materials based on size of particles
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Separates substances based on their boiling points
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Occurs when some properties of the material change but not the composition Some are reversible, some are not
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Chemical Property: ability to produce a change in the composition of matter Observed only when substances are changing into different substances Ex: Flammability and Reactivity
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Materials ability to burn in presence of oxygen
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How easily a substance combines chemically with another Ex: Rust (oxygen and iron) Ex: Water and baking soda
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Chemical Change: when a substance changes from one form to another Evidence of Chemical changes: 1. Change in color 2. Production of gas 3. Formation of a precipitate (a solid that forms)
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