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Matter: Properties & Changes Chapter 3
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3.1 Properties of Matter Matter is very diverse—we must begin to organize and describe it. What is a substance? pure; has an unchanging composition Examples of a substance include… Examples of a substance include…
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Watertable salt
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& gasoline
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What is not a substance? Sea water Air
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What is a physical property? A characteristic that can be observed/measured without changing the composition Examples…
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Examples… shape, weight, color, density, odor, taste, hardness, melting/boiling point. (If they have consistent composition= they have consistent phys property.)
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2 types of phys properties Extensive property- dependent on the amount of sub Ex. Intensive property- independent of the amount of sub Ex.
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Gold miners… gold vs. fools gold
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What is a chemical property? Ability of a substance to combine with of change into one or more other substances. Examples…
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iron
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1. iron forming rust when combined with air.
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2. iron has no reaction with nitrogen gas.
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What are some physical properties of copper? What are some chemical properties of copper?
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What are some phys/chem properties of water? Phys. prop. Chem. prop. Reacts with metals Good solvent pH
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States of Matter
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Solid- will not conform to a container Definite shape? yes Definite volume? yes Examples… How are particles arranged? Tightly packed Particle movement? No (very little)
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States of Matter Liquids- matter that flows Definite shape? no Definite volume? yesExamples… How are particles arranged? They are less closely packed Particle movement? yes yes
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States of Matter Gases- matter that flows Definite shape? no Definite volume? no Examples… How are particles arranged? Very far apart Particle movement? yes Fills entire container? yes Compressed? Very compressible
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Gas versus Vapor GAS Naturally gaseous Ex. Oxygen gas VAPOR A gaseous STATE of a substance Normally solid/liquid at room temperature Ex. steam
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3.2 Changes in Matter Physical changes- changes that do not alter the composition of a substance. Ex…
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Physical changes Keywords… bend grind crush Melt freeze boil vaporize condenses
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Chemical changes- one or more substances changes into other substances; aka CHEMICAL REACTION Examples… HgO Hg + O 2
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Chemical change Keywords… Explodes Rusts Oxidizes Corrodes Tarnish Ferment Burn Rot
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Chemical change Evidence of chem rxn… pg 63 color change puts off heat odor change Solid is formed Forms gases.
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Conservation of mass Conservation of mass- Mass is neither created nor destroyed in any process, it is conserved. (Mass is recycled.)
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Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794)
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Conservation of Mass Mass reactants = Mass products Ex. HgO (s) Hg (l) + O 2 (g) 216 g 200 g + ? 216 g 200 g + ? ReactantProducts (before rxn)(after rxn)
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Ex. In an experiment, 10.00 g red mercury (II) oxide powder is heated in a test tube where it forms liquid mercury & oxygen gas. 9.26 g of liquid mercury was recovered. What is the mass of oxygen formed? ** practice problems 6-9
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3.3 Mixtures of Matter What are two broad categories of matter? Substance & mixtures What is a mixture? Combination of multiple sub
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2 types of mixtures: 1. Heterogeneous mixture- (not blended smoothly)(can be sep. by phys. means) Ex… Sand & water Ketchup Oil & water Others?
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2 types of mixtures: 2. Homogeneous mixtures- (blended smoothly)(can be sep. by phys.means) A.k.a. “Solutions” Ex…
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Ex… Type of solution Example: gas- gas gas- liquid liquid- gas liquid- liquid solid- liquid solid- solid
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List 4 ways to separate mixtures. 1. Filtration- separates solid from liquid Ex. 2. Distillation- sep. solution of 2 liquids b/c of different boiling pt. Ex. 3. Crystallization- sep of dissolved solid from solution Ex. 4.Chromatography- sep. components of a mixture by travelling Ex.
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3.4 Elements & Compounds What is an element? A pure sub that cannot be further broken down Ex… Na, N, Ca, O etc What is a chemical symbol? How many naturally occuring element are there? 91 H>Fr
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3.4 Elements & Compounds What was Dmitri Mendeleev’s most significant contribution to chemistry? Chart that organized elements into rows & columns based on similarities. Horizontal rows are called “periods” Vertical rows are called “groups” or “family” Elements of the same group have similar physical & chemical properties.
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3.4 Elements & Compounds What was so amazing about Mendeleev’s table? He left blanks b/c he predicted that there were more elements that haven’t been discovered yet.
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3.4 Elements & Compounds What is a compound? A substance consisting of 2 or more elements. Ex… H 2 O, NaCl, CO 2 Compounds can be broken down by chemical means.
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3.4 Elements & Compounds Can water be decomposed? Yes, electrolysis
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Are the properties of a compound the same as the elements of which it is composed? NO Ex. Sodium- metal solid, soft, highly reactive with water Chlorine- gas, yellowish, poisonous Salt- crystal solid, hard, white, harmless
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Ex. Oxygen- flammable, for respiration Hydrogen- flammable Water- not flammable
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What is the Law of Definite Proportion? Regardless of mass, a comp. will always have the same proportion. Formula for calculating percent by mass: mass of element X 100% = % by mass mass of element X 100% = % by mass mass of compound mass of compound
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% by mass example Ex. 1 The mass of carbon in a 20.0g sample of sucrose (sugar) is 8.4g. What % by mass is carbon?
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% by mass example Ex. 2 You have a 500. g sample of sucrose. Carbon in this sample has a mass of 210.5g. What percent by mass is carbon? ** Practice problems p. 76 #20-23
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What is the law of Multiple proportions? Chemicals with different ratios of elements are different compounds. Can compounds composed of the same element be different compounds? Yes. If they have different mass ratios Ex. H 2 0- water H 2 O 2 – hydrogen peroxide H 2 O 2 – hydrogen peroxide
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