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Chapter 3 Properties of Matter
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Section 1: What is matter?
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Vocabulary Matter Volume Meniscus Mass Weight
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Vocabulary Matter – Anything that has mass and takes up space Volume – Amount of space an object takes up Meniscus – Curve at a liquid’s surface
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Vocabulary Mass – Amount of matter in an object Weight – Measure of the gravitational force on an object
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Matter and Volume All matter takes up space (volume) No two objects can occupy the same space at the same time
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Matter and Volume Liter (L) is the SI unit for volume Small liquids are measured in milliliters (mL) – 1 L = 1,000 mL All liquid is measure in L or mL
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Matter and Volume Measuring liquid – Use a graduated cylinder – Accuracy matters!
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Matter and Volume Read volume at the meniscus Get Eye Level
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Matter and Volume Solid objects measured in cubic units – Cubic = having 3 dimensions Cubic meters -- m³ Cubic centimeters -- cm³ Volume = (length) (width) (height)
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Matter and Volume Irregular shaped objects – Use water displacement to find volume
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Matter and Volume Water displacement 1.Measure starting water amount 2.Place object inside graduated cylinder 3.Re-measure water amount 4.Take difference
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Matter and Volume Solid objects ALWAYS measured in cubic units – cm³ Water displacement measures mL Remember….. – 1 mL = 1 cm³ So…. Convert mL reading to cm³
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Matter and Mass Mass never changes based on location – Only if amount of matter changes Ex: You lose weight Ex: you cut a piece of wood in ½ Weight is amount of gravitational force – Changes based upon object’s location in the universe
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Matter and Mass Mass measured in grams (g) or kilograms (kg) – 1 kg = 1,000 grams Weight measured in newton (N)
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Weight measured by spring scale Mass measured by balance scale Matter and Mass
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Section 2: Physical Properties
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Vocabulary Physical property Density Physical change
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Vocabulary Physical property – Characteristic of a substance that does not involve a chemical change Density – Amount of matter in a given volume Physical change – A change of matter from one form to another form without a change in chemical properties
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Identifying Physical Properties Physical properties can be observed or measured without changing its identity – Looking at ball’s color – Measuring the ball’s volume
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Identifying Physical Properties Examples… – Color – Size – Texture / feel – Magnetism – Flexibility – Smell
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Identifying Physical Properties More examples – Ductility Ability to be pulled into wires – metal – Malleability Ability to be pounded into shapes – Metal – think aluminum into various shapes/containers
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State – Solid, liquid, gas Solubility – Ability to dissolve Thermal conductivity – Rate which a substances transfers heat Identifying Physical Properties
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Density – Must have a unit of measurement! g / cm³ -- for solids g / mL -- for liquids – Density is constant If you double the volume of an object, then it’s mass always doubled
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Identifying Physical Properties
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Density and Floating / Sinking – Water density = 1 g / mL – If object density greater than 1 g / mL, then it will sink – If object density less than 1 g / mL, then it will float
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Identifying Physical Properties
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Physical Change: NO NEW Substance A change that affects a physical property is a physical change – Twisting a paper clip – Sanding a piece of wood
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Physical Change: No new substance Most physical changes are reversible Classic example – Water ice – Ice water – Water steam – Steam water Physical changes do not change the identity of the substance
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Section 3: Chemical Properties
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Vocabulary Chemical property – Describes a substance’s ability to participate in chemical reactions Chemical change – Occurs when one or more substances change into an entirely new substance
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Identifying Chemical Properties Chemical properties describe matters ability to change into a NEW substance Examples: – Reactivity Ability to change into a new substance – Flammability Ability to burn
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Identifying Chemical Properties Physical or chemical property? – physical = something to be observed Touch, feel, look, weight, smell, etc – Chemical = composition of matter Harder to see
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Identifying Chemical Properties Physical or Chemical?
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Identifying Chemical Properties Physical or Chemical?
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Chemical Changes & New Substance Chemical change is the process Chemical properties describe what chemical changes will take place
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Chemical Changes & New Substance Signs of a chemical change – Change of color – Change of odor – Fizz or foam – Light being given off
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Chemical Changes & New Substance Chemical changes almost always involve heat – Losing heat – exothermic – Gaining heat -- endothermic
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Physical vs Chemical Changes Physical changes do not changes the substances composition – Ice water steam It’s all H₂O Chemical changes do change the composition because it’s a new substance
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Physical vs Chemical Changes Most physical changes are easily undone Chemical changes are almost impossible to reverse – Think a firework explosion
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