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Classifying Matter and the Periodic Table From Chapter 8 & 10 in Trefil & Hazen The Sciences
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Classification of Matter
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…discuss the origin and development of the idea of “atoms”. 530 B.C. Democritus atomos Smallest piece of “uncuttable” matter atoms are eternal and unchanging relationship between atoms is constantly shifting
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Figure 8-1 Repeatedly dividing a bar of gold, just like cutting paper repeatedly, produces smaller and smaller groups of atoms, until you come to a single gold atom. Dividing that atom into two parts produces fragments that no longer have the properties of gold.
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Antoine Lavoisier’s law of conservation of matter measured the mass of substances before and after chemical reactions found that the masses were always equal
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Joseph Proust’ law of constant composition: he found that a given compound always contains the same elements in the same proportions by mass
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Dalton’s atomic theory of matter each element is composed of extremely small particles called atoms all atoms of a given element are identical, but they differ from those of other any other element
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Dalton’s atomic theory of matter a given compound always has the same relative numbers and kinds of atoms atoms are neither created nor destroyed in any chemical reaction
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…distinguish between atoms and elements. Atom = the smallest particle of an element that retains the chemical identity of that element. An element is a material made from a single type of atom.
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…evaluate evidence for the existence of atoms. Behavior of a gas Chemical combinations Radioactivity Brownian motion X-ray crystallography Atomic-scale microscopy
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Mendeleev and the Periodic Table of the Elements
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Mendeleev’s Table
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…interpret J.J. Thompson’s cathode ray tube experiment.
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Thompson’s Tube gave first evidence of the electron “cathode” is the connection to negative source of electricity The “ray” was a stream of particles carrying negative electric charge
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Figure 8-3 In Rutherford’s experiment, a beam of radioactive particles was scattered by atomic nuclei in a piece of gold foil. A lead shield protected researchers from the radiation. Interpret E. Rutherford’s gold foil experiment.
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Discovery of the electron electron Discovery of the proton proton Discovery of the neutron neutron 3 Li 6.941
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“Flame Test”
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Bohr Model of the Atom
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Figure 8-6 Stairs provide an analogy to energy changes associated with electrons in the Bohr atom.
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Figure 8-7 Electrons may jump between the energy levels shown in (a) and, in the process, (b) absorb or (c) emit energy in the form of a photon.
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Physical Properties… describe the physical characteristics of a substance, such as color, hardness, density, texture, and phase.
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Physical change… is a change in some property of a substance. Usually occur during heating/cooling or when there is a change in pressure.
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Chemical properties… characterize the tendency of a substance to transform into a different substance.
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Chemical change Atoms rearrange during a chemical change, switching partners as previous connections are broken and new ones are formed. Evidence?
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Physical change New attributes result from new set of conditions imposed on the material Chemical change New attributes are the physical properties of a fundamentally different material
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Element: a pure substance containing only one kind of atom Periodic Table – front cover and p 172 ElementsymbolLatin name SodiumNanatrium PotassiumKkalium CopperCucuprum GoldAuaurum LeadPbplumbum
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Atoms that compose an element may combine in a variety of ways. Gold, Au Sulfur, S 8 Nitrogen, N 2 Oxygen, O 2
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Compounds –atoms of different elements combined in a fixed ratio Compounds have physical and chemical properties different from the properties of their elemental components NaCl, sodium chloride or table salt Fe 2 O 3, iron oxide or rust
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Mixtures = various combinations of elements, compounds, or both Stainless steel is a mixture of the elements iron, chromium, nickel and carbon. Our atmosphere is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and pollutants.
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How might we separate the following: Iron filings and sand Sawdust and rubber washers Salt and water Oil and water Point: Components of any mixture can be separated by physical means.
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Classification of Matter
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Pure Substance Element –Gold, Au –Hydrogen, H 2 –Silicon, Si Compound –Salt, NaCl –Carbon Dioxide, CO 2 –Ammonia, NH 3
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Impure Substances Heterogenous Mixture –Sand in water –Oil and water –Salt and pepper Homogenous Mixture –Solution –Suspension
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Homogenous Mixture Solution –Air (N 2, O 2 ) –Salt water (NaCl, H 2 O) –Stainless Steel (Fe, Cr, Ni, C) Suspension –Milk (water, solid proteins) –Blood (water, solid cells, nutrients) –Fog (air, tiny water droplets)
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Figure 8-13 The periodic table of the elements. The weights of the elements increase from left to right. Each vertical column groups elements with similar chemical properties. Periodic Table Basics: Element Symbol, Atomic Number, Average Atomic Mass, Families and Periods.
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Average Atomic Mass = sum of protons and neutrons; an average of the relative abundance of the isotopes for that element 92 U 238.028
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…distinguish between properties of metals, metalloids, and nonmetals.
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…compare and contrast families of elements in terms of their chemical properties. Alkali Metals, group IA (1)
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…compare and contrast families of elements in terms of their chemical properties. Alkaline Earth Metals, group IIA (2)
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…compare and contrast families of elements in terms of their chemical properties. Halogens, group VIIA (17)
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…compare and contrast families of elements in terms of their chemical properties. Noble Gases, group VIIIA (18)
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NaCl CaCl 2 MgO Al 2 O 3
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H 2 O CO 2 CH 4 NH 3
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Text questions: Chapter 8 –Discussion Questions 6-10 p. 175 Chapter 10 –Discussion Questions p. 216: 1,2,4,5,6,7,11 and Problems 1, 2, 3.
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