1 / 11

What is the difference between cO 2 , o 2 and Carbonated water?

What is the difference between cO 2 , o 2 and Carbonated water?. All Matter has Properties. Extensive properties- dependent on the amount of substance there. (mass, volume) Intensive properties- depends on the type of matter and is independent of how much is there. (density, ability to burn)

alaina
Download Presentation

What is the difference between cO 2 , o 2 and Carbonated water?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is the difference between cO2, o2and Carbonated water?

  2. All Matter has Properties • Extensive properties- dependent on the amount of substance there. (mass, volume) • Intensive properties- depends on the type of matter and is independent of how much is there. (density, ability to burn) • Physical properties- things are observed or measured (color, density, brittle or hard, melting point, boiling point, freezing point) • Chemical properties- its ability to undergo chemical reactions (ability to burn, corrosiveness, decompose, rust, explode)

  3. Pure Substances • Pure substances can not be separated by physical means such as heat or tearing • Two types of pure substances • Element • Compound

  4. Elements • They can not be broken down by chemical means into any simpler substances. • All elements are found on the periodic table (116 of them) • Given a chemical symbol on the periodic table. • 1st letter is always CAPITALIZED • 2nd letter is always lower case (if there is one)

  5. Compounds • Composed of two or more elements chemically combined. • Can be broken down in elemental forms by chemical means. • Examples: H2O, CO2, H2SO4 H2O + electricity → H2 + O2

  6. Impure Substances • Better known as Mixtures • Mixtures are a combination of elements and or compounds that can be separated by physical means. • Example: Salt water can be separated into salt and water by evaporating the water. • Two types of mixtures • Homogeneous • Heterogeneous

  7. Homogeneous • You can not visibly distinguish the difference between the parts of the mixture • Homogenized milk • Orange juice without pulp • Salt water • Air • Ink • Steel • Another name is solution

  8. Heterogeneous • You can visibly see the parts of the mixture • Rough Concrete • Chocolate chip cookies

  9. Separating Mixtures • Filtration- separates pieces of a mixture by the size of the particles • Example: coffee filters • Distillation- separates parts of a mixture by their boiling points • Example: Alcohol from water

  10. Physical Change • When the substance itself remains the same • Examples: • Phase Changes. When H2O goes from a liquid to a solid in the freezing process, it still remains H2O. • Tearing • Cutting • Bending

  11. Chemical Change • When the chemical makeup and hence the symbols change during a chemical reaction. • Heating of sugar and turn C6H12O6 into Carbon and H2O • C6H12O6 + heat → C + H2O Left side of ARROW are reactants Right side of ARROW are products Arrow means produces or yields + sign means “and” or “reacts with”

More Related