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Chapter 2 Matter & Change
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Matter Anything that has mass & takes up space All materials you hold or touch Air you breathe
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Mass = a measure of the amount of matter an object contains Volume = measure of the space occupied by an object Substance = type of matter with a fixed composition (can be an element or a compound)
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Physical Properties Quality or condition of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the substances composition color, shape, odor, texture, density
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Intensive Properties Physical properties depend upon the type of matter in a sample, not the amount, it helps you determine what a substance is Melting point, Density, Viscosity, Color Every sample of a given substance has the identical intensive properties because every sample has the same composition
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Extensive Properties Physical properties that depend upon the amount of matter in a sample on hand & do not help you determine what a substance is Mass Length Volume
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This blue crystal has a mass of 0.32g and a density of 3.20 g/cm 3. It is not malleable and has a volume of 0.1 cm 3 Which properties listed are intensive? 3.2 g/cm 3, not malleable, blue Which properties listed are extensive? 0.32g, 0.1cm 3
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States of Matter: Solid Particles are in a fixed position – therefore, they have a rigid structure Particles have almost no freedom to change position; they change position around a fixed point Not easily compressed
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States of Matter: Liquid Particles are close together and move freely around each other Liquids vary in viscosity (the resistance of a fluid to flow – thickness) molasses vs. vinegar Not easily compressed
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States of Matter: Gas Particles expand to fill available space, move constantly and rarely stick together Gas exerts pressure (force exerted per unit area of a surface) and will escape its container if possible – balloons, propane tanks, gas grills Easily compressed
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Physical Changes Properties of a material change; however, the composition of the material does not change Can be reversible Melting, boiling Can be Irrevers ible Slicing, cutting
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Mixtures Mixture a combination of two or more components
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Hetero vs. Homogeneous Homogeneous mixture = contains two or more gases, liquids, or solids that are blended evenly throughout Vinegar, salt water, margarine, gasoline Heterogeneous mixture = a mixture in which different materials can be distinguished easily Fruit salad, trail mix, granite
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Which is which? HeterogeneousHomogeneous P
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Separating Mixtures Filtration = separates a solid from the liquid in a heterogeneous mixture Distillation = process used to separate dissolved solids from a liquid (boiling and then condensing) Evaporation
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Substance Matter that has a uniform and definite composition Every sample has identical intensive properties because every sample has the same composition
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Elements and Compounds Compound two or more elements that are chemically combined, can be broken down into simpler substances Water Hydrogen & Oxygen Element substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances composed of one type of atom
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Chemical Properties of Matter The way a substance reacts with another to form a new substance with different properties Involve reactivity – ability of a substance to combine chemically with another substance Chemical properties of compounds vary from the individual elements that they are made from
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Chemical Changes Chemical changes are changes in composition – atoms are changed or rearranged bumper with rust
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Law of Conservation of Mass Mass can not be created or destroyed Total mass of all matter stays the same as before the change – it changes from one form to another From ice to liquid to gas, it will all have the same mass
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Molecules Molecule smallest unit of a substance that exhibits all of the properties characteristic of that substance
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Chemical Formula Chemical shorthand that uses symbols and numbers indicating the elements in a compound and their ratios C 6 H 8 N 4 O 2 Theobromine (chocolate) C 6 H 12 O 6 Fructose (sugar)
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The End
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