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Categorizing our environment
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Classifying Matter Mixtures
A physical blend of two or more substances. Examples: Beef stew, air - mixture of gases
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Classifying Matter Mixture (Heterogeneous)
Not uniform in composition One portion of the mixture is different from the composition of another portion Example: Soil - sand, silt, clay, decayed material
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Classifying matter Mixture ( homogeneous)
Completely uniform composition Components are evenly distributed throughout the sample Example Alloys - mixture of metals (brass, steel) AKA - solution Example - ammonia, alloys, kool-aid
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Classifying Matter Mixtures can be separated by physical means
Examples A spoon can separate beef stew Sulfur and iron can be separated with a magnet Tap water is a mixture that can be separated by distillation. Distillation - a separation techniques based on the physical property of boiling points. Liquid is boiled to produce a vapor Then condensed to a liquid leaving impurities behind
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Categorizing our environment
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Classifying Matter Elements
Simplest form of matter Cannot be broken down into anything else Building blocks for all other substances Examples Hydrogen, oxygen, carbon
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Classifying Matter Compounds
Two or more elements combined through a chemical bond Can only be separated into simpler substances by chemical reactions Example Sugar - C12H22O11
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Chemical and physical properties of compounds are different from their constituent elements.
Examples Sugar Carbon is black Hydrogen is a gas Oxygen is a gas Salt - NaCl Na (sodium) soft metal that explodes with water Cl (Chlorine) pale yellow-green poisonous gas
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Classifying matter review Remember
Substance - all of one kind of matter Examples: element or compound Mixture - has more than one kind of material Examples - two or more compounds or elements that are mixed, not chemically combined
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Categorizing our environment
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