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Published byEstella Moody Modified over 8 years ago
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substancemixture element Homo- geneous compound Hetero- geneous MATTER Physically separable Chemically separable
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GASLIQUIDSOLID CompressibleHighlySlightly DensityLowHigh VolumeFills containerDefinite ShapeSame as container Own shape DiffusionRapidSlowVery slow ExpansionHigh w/ heatingLow w/ heatingLow Kinetic EnergyHighestMiddleLowest Arrangement of particles Total disorder. Particles are far apart. Random Motion Disorder Particles closer together Sliding Motion Ordered Very close together Vibrate and rotate Illustration
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Mixtures & Separation Techniques
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Mixtures Matter that has variable composition. Examples: air, metal alloys
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Homogeneous Mixtures = same throughout Does not vary in composition from one region of the solution to another Also called a solution Solutions can form from any of the states of matter Air – gas solution Brass – solid solution Coffee – liquid/dissolved solid solution
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Heterogeneous Mixtures Contains regions with differing properties Examples –Granite –Blood –Eggs
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Separating Mixtures There are 4 main techniques for separating mixtures – Filtration – Distillation – Crystallization – Chromatography
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Filtration Uses a porous barrier (filter) to separate a solid from a liquid The residue is the substance that remains on the filter paper. The filtrate is the substance that flows through the filter paper. Ex. filter paper with sand & water
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Distillation Used to separate homogeneous mixtures. Technique is based on differences in boiling points Ex. mixture of alcohol & water (alcohol has a lower boiling point than water)
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Crystallization separation technique that forms pure solid particles of a substance from a solution containing the dissolved substance. Supersaturated solution Ex. rock candy
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Chromatography separates components of a mixture on their tendency to travel or to be drawn across the surface of another material. Ex. ink dyes when it gets wet
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