Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLiliana Francis Modified over 8 years ago
1
Chapter 3 Classification of Matter Objectives: Define and give examples of 3 states of matter (3.1 & 3.2) Distinguish between substances and mixtures (3.3 & 3.12) Understand what elements are (3.4-3.7) Distinguish between metals, nonmetals and metalloids (3.8) Define compounds and diatomic molecules (3.9 & 3.10) Be able to write chemical formulas (3.11)
2
What is Matter? Anything that has mass and occupies space Composed of atoms Exists in three states on earth Solid Liquid Gas Exists in fourth state in space Plasma
3
Solids Definite shape and volume Particles tightly packed Crystalline – salt, sugar, quartz Amorphous solids – no regular, geometric pattern
4
Liquids Definite volume Not a definite shape (Takes shape of container) Particles have more energy Particles can move freely
5
Gases Indefinite volume No definite shape Particles have high energy level Particles move independently of one another
7
Substances and Mixtures Pure Substance: a particular kind of matter with a definite, fixed composition Elements (copper, gold, oxygen) Compounds (sugar, salt, water) Mixture: a blend of two or more pure substances Not chemically combined
8
Matter Pure substances (homogeneous composition) Mixtures of two or more substances ElementsCompounds Solutions (homogeneous composition – one phase) Heterogeneous mixtures (two or more phases) Figure 3.2 (page 48)
9
Types of Mixtures Heterogeneous mixtures Visibly different parts Chocolate chip cookies; granite Two or more phases (usually) Homogeneous mixtures Different parts not visible (uniform throughout) One phase Seawater; air
10
Separating Mixtures Do NOT cause chemical changes Heterogeneous Mixtures Filtration
11
Separating Mixtures Homogeneous Mixtures Distillation
12
Separating Mixtures Homogeneous Mixtures Chromatography
13
Separating Mixtures Homogeneous Mixtures Crystallization
14
Pure Substances Elements A substance that cannot be separated into simpler substances Compound Two or more elements combined through a chemical reaction Different properties than elements which compose it
15
Elements ~111 presently known elements Building blocks of all substances At room temperature: 2 liquid 11 gases All others solid Figure 3.3 – distribution of elements in galaxies, earth’s crust, seawater and air, and human bodies
16
Elements Names of the elements Greek Latin German Properties of elements Scientist who discovered it Location where discovered
17
Elements Arranged in the Periodic Table (inside front cover) Symbols One or two letters Usually part of name (Table 3.3, pg 52) Some symbols are Latin/Greek name (Table 3.4, pg 52)
18
Elements Classificiation Metal Nonmetal Metalloid See Table 3.5 (page 54)
19
Elements Metals: Usually solid at room temperature Good conductors of heat and electricity High luster Ductile Malleable High melting point; high density Usually don’t combine with each other Readily combine with nonmetals
20
Nonmetals: Solids (C, P, S, Se, I); Liquid (Br); Gases (all others) Poor conductors of heat and electricity; no luster Low melting point; low density Will combine with each other (CO 2 ) Will combine with metals or metalloids Some found uncombined in nature (noble gases)
21
Elements Metalloids Have properties of both metals and nonmetals Some used for semiconductors in electronics
22
Compounds Two or more elements chemically combined New properties Definite proportions Can be chemically separated Molecular or Ionic
23
Compounds Molecular Held together with covalent bonds Molecule: smallest uncharged individual unit of a compound Water is an example
24
Compounds Ionic Ion: positively or negatively charged atom or group of atoms Cation – positive Anion – negative Held together by ionic bond – attraction between positive and negative charges
25
Compounds Diatomic Molecules Always only 2 atoms 7 naturally occurring Hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, flourine, chlorine, bromine, iodine H 2, O 2, N 2, F 2, Cl 2, Br 2, I 2,
26
Chemical Formulas Abbreviations for compounds Symbols and ratios of atoms Sodium Chloride (NaCl) 1 atom of sodium for every 1 atom of chlorine Number 1 not usually written
27
Subscript indicates # of atoms present H 2 O has 2 Hydrogen atoms and 1 Oxygen atom H 2 SO 4 has NaOH has C 6 H 12 O 6 has 2 hydrogen atoms, 1 sulfur atom, 4 oxygen atoms 1 sodium atom, 1 oxygen atom, 1 hydrogen atom 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms
28
Chemical Formulas Parentheses are used to show when a compound contains more than one group of atoms that occurs as a unit Calcium Nitrate Ca(NO 3 ) 2 has 1 calcium, 2 nitrogen, and 6 oxygen atoms Ba 3 (PO 4 ) 2 has 3 barium, 2 phosphorus, and 8 oxygen atoms
29
Chemical Formulas Show only number and kind of atom Do not show arrangement of the atoms or how chemically bonded
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.