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Published byAda Harrell Modified over 9 years ago
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CHAPTER 2
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How to classify?
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CLASSIFYING MATTER MATTER PURE SUBSTANCE MIXTURE ELEMENTCOMPOUND HOMOGENEOUSHETEROGENEOUS
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definitions Pure Substance: – MATTER THAT ALWAYS HAS THE SAME COMPOSITION Mixture: – A PHYSICAL COMBINATION OF 2 OR MORE SUBSTANCES
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more definitions Two categories of Pure Substances: Element – Can’t be broken down into simpler substances – Organized on Periodic Table – Each contain different types of atom – Amazing: Only about 110 different atoms make
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Elements some more
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Compound Can be broken down only by chemical reaction Examples: H 2 O SiO 2 C 6 H 12 O 6 Proportions are FIXED – All water everywhere forever has 2 H and 1 O Properties of Compound are DIFFERENT from the elements it’s made from Na + Cl 2 NaCl Can be broken down only by chemical reaction Examples: H 2 O SiO 2 C 6 H 12 O 6 Proportions are FIXED – All water everywhere forever has 2 H and 1 O Properties of Compound are DIFFERENT from the elements it’s made from Na + Cl 2 NaCl
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Mixtures Definition: 2 or more substances physically combined Examples: fruit salad, salt water, steel, sand, striped cloth, maple syrup Keep some (most) of their individual properties. Classified by how well the substances are mixed.
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Heterogeneous Mixture The parts are noticeably different from one another. fruit salad, sand, striped cloth
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Homogeneous Mixture The parts are so evenly mixed the individual parts are difficult or impossible to distinguish. Sea water, steel, maple syrup
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Special Types of Mixtures 1.SOLUTION Formed when one substance DISSOLVES in another Kool-Aid, Antifreeze, Oxygen in water Dissolved particles are so small: – Do not separate over time – If filtered, no particles are trapped – Light will pass through without being scattered
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2. SUSPENSION A heterogeneous mixture that will separate over time. Muddy water, OJ with pulp, Apple cider Dissolved particles are larger: – Will separate over time – If filtered, particles will be trapped – Light passing into it is scattered in all directions
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3. COLLOID A mixture with larger particles than solution but smaller than suspension Fog, milk, styrofoam, blood, gelatin Medium-sized particles – Will not separate into layers – A filter traps no particles – Will scatter light in all directions
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CHECK YOURSELF Place the following in order from smallest to largest particle size SUSPENSION, SOLUTION, COLLOID SOLUTION COLLOID SUSPENSION SMALLEST LARGEST
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Fill in the diagram MATTER MIXTURE PURE SUBSTANCE ELEMENTCOMPOUND HOMOGENEOUSHETEROGENEOUS SOLUTION COLLOID SUSPENSION
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Physical Properties Any characteristic that can be measured or observed without changing the composition of the material.
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VISCOSITY – Ability to flow…slow flowing (syrup) = viscous CONDUCTIVITY – Ability to conduct heat and/or electricity MALLEABILITY – Ability to bend or be hammered without breaking HARDNESS – Measures resistance to shape change
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Melting Point – Temp at which particles become free to pass each other Boiling Point – Temp at which particles gain total freedom from one another Density – Amount of matter per unit volume
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Uses of Physical Properties 1.Identify a substance: List of properties is like a fingerprint 2.Choosing a substance: – Bulletproof vest? – Artificial Heart?
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3. Mixture Separation – Filtration Uses differences in particle size – Distillation Uses differences in boiling point
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Divide this list into two groups: Burning a marshmallow Cutting paper Melting an ice cube Smashing a light bulb Rusting car Dissolving salt in water Baking soda + Vinegar Dissolving salt in water Cutting paper Melting an ice cube Smashing a light bulb Burning a marshmallow Rusting car Baking soda + Vinegar
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Chemical Properties Can be observed only when the substance is changing into a different substance Burning a marshmallow Rusting car Baking soda + Vinegar
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Two Names: 1.Flammability – Ability to burn in the presence of oxygen 2.Reactivity – describes how readily a substance combines chemically with another Sodium is reactive with water Iron is not reactive with water Magnesium is reactive with acid
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Recognizing Chemical Change Color Change – Copper turns green with age – Rust Form a Gas – Baking soda + Vinegar – Magnesium + Acid Form a Precipitate – lead nitrate + sodium iodide
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Practice with P/C Changes Shattering GlassP C SunburnPC Bleaching clothesPC Baking cookiesPC Folding laundryPC Ripping your pantsPC Hydrogen peroxide on a cutPC
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