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Chapter 1 Sections 1.1, 1.3 Adv: Sections 1.1, 1.2, 1.3
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Section 1.1: Scope of Chemistry What is Chemistry? Areas of Study Big Ideas in Chemistry
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What is Chemistry? 化学 Means Chemistry in Japanese. The characters literally mean “Change Study.” Chemistry is the study of matter: the composition of matter and the changes matter undergoes. Write that down: it’s really important!
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Is it relevant to my life? Am I ever going to use this? How should I know? But Chemistry is all around you. It is called the “central” science because it is fundamental to understanding all other sciences well. Everything is made of matter. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space.
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Areas of Study No one person could possibly know everything there is to know about Chemistry. Chemistry can be broken down into 5 major areas of study: Organic Chemistry Biochemistry Inorganic Chemistry Analytical Chemistry Physical Chemistry
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Organic Chemistry The study of compounds (chemicals) which contain CARBON. They also will have hydrogen and maybe oxygen or nitrogen, and possibly lots of other elements too. We will learn a little organic chemistry, because they test for it on the SOL.
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Organic Chemistry All branches of chemistry, including Organic can be further broken down into: Pure chemistry Doing chemistry just for the joy of doing research. May not have any practical value or use. Done at major universities. Applied chemistry Doing chemistry to produce a specific product to make money off of. Generally done at a company.
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Organic Chemistry Originally organic meant “comes from nature.” However, not all organic compounds come from nature or living things today. MOST are created by scientists in a lab. Organic groceries just mean they are produced in a “natural” way without any man-made fertilizers or chemical enhancements.
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Organic Chemistry = Biochemistry? Biochemistry is one of the “subdivisions” of Organic Chemistry. Biochemistry is the study of organic compounds which exist in living things (primarily humans) and the chemical processes which occur in living things. Breathing and digestion are caused and regulated by chemistry!
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Organic Chemistry All branches of chemistry, including Organic can be further broken down into: Pure chemistry Doing chemistry just for the joy of doing research. May not have any practical value or use. Done at major universities. Applied chemistry Doing chemistry to produce a specific product to make money off of. Generally done at a company.
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Hydrocarbons The simplest organic compounds are called hydrocarbons. These compounds ONLY contain C and Hydrogen. The simplest one is methane (natural gas) which has a formula CH 4. You should write that down and memorize that!
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Hydrocarbons Hydrocarbons are also called “fossil fuels” (because they come from decomposed living things) and “petrochemicals” (because they are found in petroleum). Petroleum is a mixture of hydrocarbons found in geologic formations beneath the Earth’s surface. Used for energy Used for making plastic
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Medicines or Pharmaceuticals: Aspirin Many organic compounds have value as medicines. Aspirin is found in nature. But all of the aspirin you buy is made in chemical companies, like Bayer. Aspirin occurs naturally in willow tree bark. It was discovered by Hippocrates.
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Medicines or Pharmaceuticals: Aspirin Hippocratesmade a powder with the bark and used it to treat headaches and fevers as early as 400BC. Aspirin was first isolated in Germany at Bayer in 1897. It is quite easy to make (I do it at Germanna as a lab experiment). Many pharmaceutical products are quite difficult to make however.
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Polymers Polymers can be natural or synthetic (man made). They are large molecules composed of simple molecules hooked together in a long chain. Monomer = one unit of chain Polymer = many units to form the chain Legos?
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Natural Polymers Natural Polymers Proteins (monomer = amino acid) Starch and Cellulose (monomer = sugar molecules) DNA or RNA (monomer = purine or pyrimidine bases)
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Synthetic Polymers Synthetic Polymers Plastics PE or polyethylene (most common plastic found in soda bottles) PVC or polyvinylchloride (pipes used for plumbing) Styrofoam or polystyrene (cups) Polyacrylate (found in disposable diapers) Fibers (nylon, rayon, polyester) Kevlar (bullet proof vests) Teflon (PTFE or polytetrafluoroethylene)
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Chemists Like Big Words polytetrafluoroethylene Just break it down into syllables. Poly Tetra Fluoro Ethyl Ene Each syllable tells me something about the structure. That’s how it works in Organic.
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Inorganic Chemistry The study of compounds (chemicals) which do not contain CARBON. Inorganic chemistry studies the REST of the elements on the Periodic Table. Carbon = Organic. Everything else = Inorganic!
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Elements on Periodic Table The Periodic Table is you BFF in this class. Don’t memorize it. However, do start learning the symbols and names for elements 1-36!
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The Element Song The Element Song: http://www.privat ehand.com/flash/ elements.html http://www.privat ehand.com/flash/ elements.html http://www.privat ehand.com/flash/ elements.html
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Analytical Chemistry The study of the type of chemistry they do on CSI and other crime shows on TV. Focuses on the composition of matter and can answer questions. How much is there? Where did it come from? Is it one substance or a mixture of more than one substance?
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Physical Chemistry The study of properties of matter. Use calculus and other high level math to do chemistry. Lots of the facts that we know about molecules were discovered by physical chemists. Bond strengths, lengths, and angles. Heat involved in reactions. Speeds of reactions.
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What’s the Big Idea? This is patterned after the College Board who redesigned AP Chemistry around 6 Big Ideas. The book uses 8. Each Big Idea will be explored in several of the chapters in the book. Big Ideas are the “central themes” of chemistry or how and why we organize things the way we do.
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What’s the Big Idea? Don’t memorize these: Chemistry as the Central Science Electrons and the Structure of Atoms Bonding and Interactions Reactions Kinetic Theory The Mole and Quantifying Matter Matter and Energy Organic Chemistry
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SOL Objectives you will be tested on CH 1 Scientific Investigation CH 2 Atomic Structure and Periodicity CH 3 Nomenclature, Formulas and Bonding CH 4 Molar Relationships CH 5 Kinetic Molecular Theory and States of Matter CH 6 Organic Chemistry
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Section 1.2 Why Study Chemistry? Next thing after Biology? Chemistry can help explain the natural world around you. Chemistry can help prepare you for a career in science or medicine or engineering. In other words, fields that you can actually find a job in after graduation. Chemistry can make you a more informed citizen and consumer in our society.
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Accidental Chemistry Pg 12-13 lists 4 “accidents” which ended up making millions of dollars. Sticky notes were invented because a chemist working at a glue company made some glue which didn’t stick very well. If you pulled on the paper it would pull right off. His invention sat on a shelf for 6 years until he discovered a use for the “worthless” glue.
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Section 1.3 Thinking Like a Scientist The word chemistry comes from alchemy. Alchemists weren’t scientists. Robert Boyle (1627-1691) changed that by calling himelf a “chymist” and was probably the first real scientist. Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794) was “the father of modern chemistry.” He explained chemical results that others had explored before him.
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Antoine Lavoisier Demonstrated the principle we now call “The Law of Conservation of Mass.” Proved water was a compound. Studied combustion and respiration and discovered oxygen and nitrogen and the percent composition of air. Turned chemistry from a series of good and detailed observations into a science of careful measurement. Wrote the first chemistry textbook (which I have on my iPad) in French, but his wife Marie Anne translated it into English. Beheaded on the guillotine during the French Revolution at age 50.
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The Scientific Method Yes, same one you have been learning since you first heard about it in elementary school. 3 major steps: Observation: look, see, smell, touch, etc. Hypothesis: more than just an “educated guess” Experiment: used to test your hypotheis.
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The Scientific Method Observations make you wonder. They suggest questions for you to study. From the observations, you will develop a hypothesis. A hypothesis must be TESTABLE. It must also be possible for it to be true or false, otherwise it isn’t a good hypothesis.
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Not an educated guess? A better way of saying it (now that we’re not in middle school anymore) is that a hypothesis is a testable statement of what you believe will happen during an experiment, based on your scientific expertise. In other words, an educated guess you can TEST!
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Experiments Used to test and support your hypothesis. Or used to test and not support your hypothesis Try not to think of “not support” as a failure. Only 2 things can happen in an experiment: it works and you learned something, or it didn’t work and you learned something else.
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Variables in Chemistry Experiments Independent or Manipulated Variable Variable “I change” Book sometimes calls it manipulated. Always graphed on “x axis” Dependent or Responding Variable Changes or responds as a result of the change you made to the independent variable. Always graphed on “y axis” Control or Constant Must be controlled so they don’t change (stay constant) If the do change, they will affect your results (because now you have more than 1 independent variable). Never graphed.
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Analyzing Data and making Conclusions Some people list these out as separate steps in the Scientific Method. I think they are all part of the Experiment step. You must analyze data to know what it is telling you. You must make conclusions to figure out if they experiment did support your hypothesis. Your analysis and conclusions can also suggest improvements for the next experiment or a whole different topic to investigate.
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Graphing Data This isn’t math class. We don’t just graph to see what it looks like. Chemistry graphs are meaningful and we can get real data off the graph. This is part of Analysis of Data. We will use Excel to produce graphs starting in Lab 2. We will use scatter plots with a “line of best fit.” Bar graphs and pie charts are generally not appropriate.
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Scientific Theory A theory is a detailed explanation of why an experiment works the way it does. A theory can NEVER be proven completely true. Theories can always be disproved if new data is discovered which doesn’t support the theory. Dalton’s Atomic Theory is studied in Section 4.1 and is the basis for modern chemistry. Kinetic Molecular Theory is studied in Sections 13.1 and 14.1
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Scientific Law A law is a statement of fact, usually about something chemical which occurs naturally. Laws are always true. They just don’t explain how or why. Law of Conservation of Mass is studied in Section 2.4. Much of what we learn this entire year is built on that law.
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sschwartz@city schools.com HW: no reading. Do Problems: pg 28-30, # 36, 45, 47, 48, 50, 59, 60*, 64, 65, 69*
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