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Types of mixtures Russ Ballard Kentlake Science Department
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 2 Suspension Activity Take canister of sand. Place in 150 mL of tap water. Stir. Allow to settle. Meeting minder on observations.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 3 Suspensions - before
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 4 Suspensions – after
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 5 Solution Activity Add scoop of NaCL to 150 mL of tap water. Observe immediate results. Let stand and observe. Filter. Meeting minder on observations.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 6 Solutions What is the difference between mixture and solution? How do you tell a heterogeneous from a homogeneous mixture?
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 7 Suspensions Heterogeneous. Particles settle out. Can be separated by filtering. May scatter light, but are not transparent.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 8 Solutions Homogeneous. Do not separate on standing. Cannot be separated by filtering. Do not scatter light.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 9 Colloid with Laser
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 10 Colloid Activity Place 150 mL of tap water in beaker. Add three drops of milk. Direct laser/light box at water. Switch on. Meeting minder on observations.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 11 Colloids Heterogeneous. Do not separate on standing. Cannot be separated by filtration. Scatters light (Tyndall effect).
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 12 Types of Solutions Solid solutions. Gaseous solutions. Liquid solutions. Aqueous solutions.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 13 Solid Solutions Combinations that are solid. Alloys of metals. –Coins –Jewelry
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 14 Alloys
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 15 Gaseous Solutions Air we breathe. Pollutants –SO 2 –NO 2
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 16 Liquid Solutions Gas in liquids. –Oxygen in water. –CO 2 in soda. –NH 3 in water.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 17 Gas in a Liquid Solution
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 18 Liquid Solutions Liquid in a liquid. Some will mix = miscible. –Alcohol and water Some will not = immiscible. –Oil and water
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 19 Aqueous Solutions Substances that dissolve in water. Produce ions. Produce molecules.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 20 Solubility of NaCl
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Polar and Non-Polar Substances.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 22 Polar Compounds Molecule has a charge. Based on atoms. Based on geometry.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 23 Non-polar Compounds Molecule has no charge. Based on atoms. Based on geometry.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 24 Using Electronegativity 0.0 -.3 = non-polar covalent 0.3 - 1.7 = polar covalent 1.7 – higher = ionic
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 25
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 26 Polar & Non-polar Compounds
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 27 Polar / Non-Polar Combinations Must be the same. Usually solid in water or liquid in liquid. “like dissolves like”.
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Solution Equilibrium
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 29 Solubility Rate Surface area Stirring Temperature Pressure
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 30 Solubility Solubility is the amount of solute that will dissolve in a specific solvent under given conditions.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 31 Predict Solubility If non-polar only a non-polar solvent will work. If polar or ionic only a polar solvent will work
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Electrolytes
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 33 Electrolytes Dissolving ionic substances in water. Ions conduct electricity. –Human body –Battery
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 34 Non-Electrolytes Do not conduct electricity. Molecules form them. –Sugar in water.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 35 Electrolytes and Non-Electrolytes.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 36 Electrolyte model
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 37 Exothermic / Endothermic Solutions A measure of bonds broken and formed. Heat is given = exothermic. Heat is needed = endothermic.
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 38 Exothermic and Endothermic
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May 5, 2004 Kentlake Science Department 39 Photo Credits http://www.schoolscience.co.uk/content/3/physics/bama/images/susp1.jpg http://www.schoolscience.co.uk/content/3/physics/bama/images/miscible4.jpg http://www.schoolscience.co.uk/content/3/physics/bama/images/sols1.gif http://www.tg.rim.or.jp/~kanai/pic/col04.jpg http://www.foundry-casting.co.uk/casting-foundry-pics/copper-base-alloys.jpg http://www.jhu.edu/~matsci/people/faculty/erlebacher/what_is_materials_science.htm http://adaptivestrategies.com/CARDIAC.jpg http://i.timeinc.net/popsci/images/science/sci0302antifreeze_A.gif http://www.washington.edu/cambots/archive/fog.gif http://www.bmb.psu.edu/courses/bisci004a/chem/phscale2.jpg http://www.csmt.ewu.edu/csmt/chem/jcorkill/soap.gif http://cator.hsc.edu/~kmd/caveman/projects/soap/water.jpg http://www.chem.neu.edu/Courses/1105Tom/05Lecture11_files/image006.jpg http://www.lhup.edu/~rkleinma/Chem220/CH1Notes/CH1f/dipole3.GIF http://www.sciencekit.com/Images/ProductImages/149666.jpg http://www.gcsevise.com/images/endo_exo.jpg
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