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Published byGeorge Riley Modified over 8 years ago
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1 WHAT ARE THE PROPERTIES OF MATTER? PHYSICAL CHANGE? CHEMICAL CHANCE?
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2 CHEMICAL REACTIONS
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3 Physical and Chemical Properties All substances have properties that we can use to identify them. idenify a person by his face, voice, height, finger prints, DNA etc.. matter has properties - and there are many of them.
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4 Physical propertiesChemical properties Properties of Matter
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5 Physical properties do not change the chemical nature of matter. IMF are changed in their observation. Examples of physical properties are: appearance, texture, color, smell, freezing point, boiling point, melting point, infra-red spectrum, opacity, viscosity and density.
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6 Chemical properties do change the chemical nature of matter. INTRA- MOLECULAR forces change in their observation. Examples of chemical properties are: heat of combustion, reactivity, PH, flammability, being poisonous.
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7 PHYSICAL & CHEMICAL CHANGES The changes that take place in substances may be categorized in two classes: Physical Change - does not produce a new substance (e.g., phase changes -melting, freezing, condensing-, breaking, crushing, cutting, and bending.) –IMF CHANGE!!! Chemical Change - produces a new substance (e.g., burning, rusting, photosynthesis, digestion, respiration, electrolysis, precipitation, and decomposition.) INTRA-MOLECULAR FORCES CHANGE!!!
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8 Physical changes melt a block of ice, you still have H 2 O at the end of the change. break a bottle, you still have glass. Physical changes are about energy and states of matter.
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9 Chemical changes burn a log in a fireplace light your Bunsen burner in lab digestion of food, souring milk Chemical changes happen on a molecular level.
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10 A chemical change occurs when a new substance is formed. In a chemical reaction, bonds are broken and new bonds are formed between different atoms. During this reaction, there is a rearrangement of atoms that makes or breaks chemical bonds. What are chemical bonds?
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(bubbles seen) 4. Explosion
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12 References http://www.iun.edu/~cpanhd/C101webnotes/ matter-and-energy/properties.html http://www.chemtutor.com/react.htm http://www.ric.edu/faculty/ptiskus/chemical/
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