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Published byBerniece Logan Modified over 9 years ago
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Matter
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Vocabulary! Matter: anything that has mass and takes up space. Mass: measure of the amount of matter in an object. Constant. Measured in Kg Volume: amount of space an object takes up.
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Weight: measure of the gravitational force on an object. Changes. Measured in newtons. Density: ratio of the mass of a substance to the volume of the substance. D=M V
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Mass vs Weight Transparency in chem folder
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So then, what’s density? It’s the amount of mass in a given volume Important stuff Density = Mass Volume Water has a density of 1.0 So if the density is lower that that, it floats If the density is greater than 1.0, it sinks!
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States of Matter Physical states in which a substance can exist. Fill in the chart with + or - Shape Volume Solid Liquid Gas
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Solid-constant shape and volume Liquid-no shape, has a constant volume takes on shape of container Gas-no shape or volume. takes on shape of container, but FILLS it
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Solid Particles are close to each other and vibrating Liquid Particles move faster, and away from each other
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Why is this bug not sinking?
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Surface tension: force that acts on the particles on the surface of a liquid.
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Gas Particles travel away from each other VERY FAST They push on the container wall, causing PRESSURE Volume increases with heat, decreases with cold
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States of Matter Change of state: change of a substance from one physical state to another. This change uses or loses energy Melting: change of state from solid to liquid. Energy added. Freezing: change of state from liquid to solid. Energy removed. Evaporation: change of a substance from liquid to gas at the surface. Boiling: change of a liquid to a gas throughout the substance. Condensation: change of a gas to a liquid.
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Changing States meltingevaporation What’s it called when water goes from a gas to a liquid?
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Solid->Liquid->Gas Uses Energy Gas->Liquid->Solid Gives off Energy
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States of Matter
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Chemical vs Physical Properties Physical properties: characteristics that can be observed without changing the substance. Do not change with the amount Example: color and density Chemical properties: characteristics that describe a substance’s ability to change. Baking soda can react with vinegar
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Chemical vs. Physical Changes Physical change: substance is not altered chemically, but changed to another state. or separated or combined. Chemical change: substance is altered chemically and displays different physical and chemical properties.
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Chemical or Physical Property? 1. Water boils at 100 degrees C 2. Diamonds are able to cut glass 3. Iron rusts in a damp environment 4. Salt is dissolved in water 5. Dry ice sublimes at room temperature
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Chemical or Physical Property? Gasoline burns in the presence of oxygen Bromine has a red color Hydrogen Peroxide decomposes to water and oxygen Vinegar will react with baking soda Aluminum has a low density
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Chemical or Physical Property? Wood is flammable Ammonia is a gas at room temperature Yeast uses sugar to form carbon dioxide and ethanol Water can be separated by electrolysis into hydrogen and oxygen
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Review A Physical property is one you can see or measure A Chemical property is how an element behaves in a reaction A Physical change is a change of state—the element is the same element in the end In a Chemical change, the substance changes into a different substance
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Vocabulary element-a substance that cannot be broken down compound-combination of different elements atom-smallest indivisible particle of matter molecule-2 or more atoms bonded together O2O2 Fe NaCl
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Compounds Compound Formula Elements Water H 2 O hydrogen, oxygen Carbon Dioxide CO 2 carbon, oxygen Vinegar CH 3 COOH carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
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Atoms Nucleus—contains most of the mass protons and neutrons Electrons-orbit in a fast moving cloud
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Atomic Nuclei Protons—positive charge Number of protons = Atomic Number Neutrons—no electrical charge Neutrons + protons = Mass Number Electrons—negative charge
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Add to Vocabulary List Proton—positive charge. In nucleus. Neutron—no charge. In nucleus. Electron—negative charge. In cloud.
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Add to Vocabulary List Atomic Number---number of protons Atomic Mass—(mass number) number of protons + neutrons
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A Variation—add to List Isotope-atoms of the same element with different number of neutrons many are radioactive Carbon 14—used to date fossils
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Atoms with the same number of protons (+) and electrons(-) are neutral Remove an electron, and it becomes POSITIVE: a positively charged ion Add an electron, and it becomes NEGATIVE: a negatively charged ion
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Your turn! Turn to page 521 in your science textbook. Math Focus Continue with Atomic Charges
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Electron Energy Levels Remember the 2-8 Rule! Carbon Atomic Number 6 Shells are 2--4 The number of electrons in the outer shell determines the behavior!
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Electrons Elements with one electron in the outer shell are very reactive Sodium Elements with 7 electrons are also! Chloride Elements with 8 electrons in their outer shell are very stable noble gases (inert) Oxygen has an atomic number of 8. What is its configuration?
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2-8-12-8-2 2-8 makes a happy atom! Remember
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2-8 makes a happy atom! 2-6Wants 2 2-7 Wants 1 Remember
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Look at the Periodic Table
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Ionic Bond Sodium (Na) donates one electron to Fluoride (Fl) NaFl
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Covalent Bond Atoms SHARE electrons Stronger than ionic bonds Chloride— 7 in outer shell Hydrogen—1 in outer shell 2 electrons are shared so the shells are 8 and 2—stable! HCl
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Ionic and Covalent Bonds Ionic—electrons are donated Metal with non-metal Valence number—tendency to gain or lose electrons example: Na +1 Covalent—electrons are shared Two types Polar and Nonpolar
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Polar Covalent Bonds Electron sharing is NOT equal One end pulls HARDER Makes one end more negative and the other more positive Example: Water! H and O atoms
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Nonpolar Covalent Bonds Electrons are shared equally Entire molecule has same charge examples: diatomic gases H 2 O 2 N 2
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