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Chapter 2: Properties of Matter
Section 1: Matter has observable properties.
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Physical Properties Physical properties of a substance can be observed without changing the identity of the substance. Density, mass, color, size, volume, and texture are examples of physical properties.
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Density is the relationship between the mass and the volume of a substance.
Density= Mass ÷ Volume
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Any change in a physical property of a substance is a physical change
Any change in a physical property of a substance is a physical change. The identity of the material remains the same during the change. Examples of physical changes include cutting a material, breaking it, and changing its state.
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Chemical properties describe how substances form new substances.
To observe chemical properties in a substance, you must see a chemical change.
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To observe the combustibility of a piece of paper, for example, the paper must burn. The products that result from burning the paper differ in identity from the paper itself.
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Signs of a chemical change include the production of an odor, a gas, or a solid and a change in temperature or color.
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Other examples of chemical properties include reactivity, tendency to corrode, and toxicity.
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Shape Color Texture Volume Size
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Measuring an object’s mass does not change the substance to another substance.
Changing the shape of a substance does not transform the substance itself.
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measurement; amount of matter in a given volume g/cm3, D = m/V
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V= l x w x h 3 cm x 4 cm x 5 cm = 60 cm3. D= m/V D= 480 g/60 cm3 D= 8 g/cm3.
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wool being transformed into a sweater,
stretching a rubberband, breaking a piece of clay in half
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When something burns, the substance changes into a new
substance, so it is a chemical change.
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substances forming other substances
used to identify c. properties change of one into another wood burning; iron rusting
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Color Change Temp Change
Bubbles Formation Light Emission
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