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SURVEY OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1151 CHAPTER 1 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state university
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CHAPTER 1 MATTER
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CHEMISTRY AND MATTER Chemistry - Is the study of matter and energy and the interactions between them - Involves studying the properties and behavior of matter Matter - Anything that has mass and occupies space Examples - Living and nonliving things - Things that can be seen: animals, plants, soil, water, clothes, books - Things that cannot be seen: air, bacteria
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CHEMISTRY AND MATTER Energy - The ability to do work - Forms of energy (sound, heat, light) are NOT considered to be matter Mass - Amount of matter in an object Volume - The amount of space that the matter takes up
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CHEMISTRY AND MATTER Difference between Mass and Weight Mass - is a measure of total quantity of matter in an object - constant and independent of location - instrument: the mass balance Weight - is a measure of the force exerted on an object by gravitational force - weight = mass x gravitational force - changes with location (e.g. gravitational attraction on the moon is 1/6th that on the earth) - instrument: spring scale
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PHYSICAL STATES OF MATTER Three physical states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas Solid - Has a definite shape and a definite volume Examples ice, book, table, TV set
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PHYSICAL STATES OF MATTER Three physical states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas Liquid - Has an indefinite shape and a definite volume - Always takes the shape of its container (the portion it occupies) Examples drinking water, juice
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PHYSICAL STATES OF MATTER Three physical states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas Gas - Has an indefinite shape and an indefinite volume - Always completely fills its container, taking the shape and volume of the container Examples air, water vapor (steam)
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PHYSICAL STATES OF MATTER State of matter depends on: - Temperature - Surrounding pressure - Strength of forces holding the structural particles together - Water can be found in all three physical states: solid ice, liquid water, and gaseous steam.
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PROPERTIES OF MATTER Two categories: physical and chemical properties Physical Property - Does not change the identity or composition of a substance - Does not involve changing a substance into another Examples shape, color, odor, density, taste, feel, mass, volume phase, melting point, boiling point, hardness
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PROPERTIES OF MATTER Two categories: physical and chemical properties Chemical Property - Involves changing a substance into another substance (chemical reactions) - Describes the reactivity of a material Examples heat of combustion, flammability, enthalpy of formation, explosiveness, toxicity, ionization potential, electronegativity
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PROPERTIES OF MATTER Two categories: physical and chemical properties Chemical Property - Failure to undergo a chemical change is also considered a chemical property Examples - inability of glass to burn - gold not reacting with water
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Two categories of changes in matter: physical and chemical changes Physical Change - When a substance changes its physical appearance but not its chemical composition Examples - change of state (from liquid to gas, from liquid to solid, etc.) - when liquid water evaporates to steam or freezes to ice PROPERTIES OF MATTER
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Two categories of changes in matter: physical and chemical changes Chemical Change - When a substance undergoes a change in chemical composition - Undergoes a chemical reaction - Converts into one or more new substances Examples - rusting of iron exposed to moist air - combustion of methane - burning of hydrogen in air PROPERTIES OF MATTER
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Properties can also be divided into extensive and intensive Extensive Property - Depends on the amount of sample under investigation Examples mass, volume Intensive Property - Does not depend on the quantity of sample - Determines the identity of the sample Examples melting point, boiling point, density
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CHEMICAL COMPOSITION Substance A material that is chemically the same throughout Pure Substance - Matter that has distinct properties and definite composition - Cannot be separated into other kinds of matter by any physical means Examples pure water, pure salt
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Elements - Pure substances that cannot be reduced to simpler substances by normal chemical means - Fundamental building blocks of all matter Examples silver, carbon, sodium, oxygen, hydrogen - Note that O 2, N 2, S 8, are elements CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
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Elements - 117 elements are known at present - 92 are naturally occurring and 25 are synthesized in the laboratory - Only 5 elements account for over 90% of Earth’s crust (oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, and calcium) - Only 3 elements account for over 90% of the human body mass (oxygen, carbon, hydrogen) CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
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Elements The symbol for each element consists of one or two letters derived from the element’s name, with the first letter capitalized Some elements and their symbols Carbon C Aluminum Al Barium Ba Beryllium Be Copper Cu Flourine F Iron Fe Gallium Ga Germanium Ge Hydrogen H Helium He Mercury Hg Iodine I Lithium Li Magnesium Mg Manganese Mn Nitrogen N Sodium Na Nickel Ni Oxygen O Phosphorus P Lead Pb Platinum Pt Sulfur S CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
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Compounds - Pure substances that can be broken into two or more simpler pure substances by chemical means - Combination of two or more elements Examples Water (H 2 O), carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), sodium chloride (NaCl) CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
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Mixture - A combination of two or more pure substances Examples grains of rice and wheat cereal and sugar salt and sand - Components of a mixture can be separated by physical means (filtration, distillation, the use of magnet for metals)
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CLASSIFICATION OF MIXTURES Homogeneous Mixture (Solution) - Is uniform throughout - Contains only one visibly distinct phase Examples - sugar or salt dissolved in water - glass - alloys (copper & tin → Bronze) (iron, carbon, chromium, and other substances → stainless steel) - air (homogeneous mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and other substances)
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CLASSIFICATION OF MIXTURES Heterogeneous Mixture - Does not have the same composition - Contains visibly different phases Examples rocks, wood, soils - Physical combination of substances produces a mixture - Chemical combination of substances produces a compound
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MATTER PURE SUBSTANCE MIXTURE ELEMENTCOMPOUND HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURE HETEROGENEOUS MIXTURE CLASSES OF MATTER
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