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Properties of substances

Properties of substances. SG Chemistry, Topic 7. Conductivity of elements and compounds. Standard Grade Chemistry Topic 7. Gold. Sodium. Carbon. Hydrogen. What do the above substances have in common? Elements Which of them conduct electricity?. Lead. Silicon. Iodine. Bromine.

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Properties of substances

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  1. Properties of substances SG Chemistry, Topic 7

  2. Conductivity of elements and compounds Standard Grade Chemistry Topic 7

  3. Gold Sodium Carbon Hydrogen • What do the above substances have in common? • Elements • Which of them conduct electricity? Lead Silicon Iodine Bromine Mercury Sulphur Potassium Phosphorus

  4. Gold Sodium Carbon Hydrogen • What do the above substances have in common? • Elements • Which of them conduct electricity? • Metal elements and carbon (graphite) • Does it make a difference what state the elements are in? • No Lead Silicon Iodine Bromine Mercury Sulphur Potassium Phosphorus

  5. Graphite and diamond

  6. Write a rule which summarises which elements can conduct electricity. • All metal elements can conduct electricity (whether solid or liquid); non-metal elements do not conduct electricity in any state, with the exception of carbon (graphite).

  7. True or false • All solid elements conduct electricity. • All liquid elements conduct electricity. • All metal elements conduct electricity. • No non-metal element conducts electricity. • Solid oxygen conducts electricity. • Liquid oxygen conducts electricity. • Solid calcium conducts electricity. • Liquid calcium conducts electricity. • Solid carbon conducts electricity.

  8. True or false • All solid elements conduct electricity. • All liquid elements conduct electricity. • All metal elements conduct electricity. • No non-metal element conducts electricity. • Solid oxygen conducts electricity. • Liquid oxygen conducts electricity. • Solid calcium conducts electricity. • Liquid calcium conducts electricity. • Solid carbon conducts electricity.

  9. Practical – conductivity of compounds • If you were to investigate whether a compound can conduct electricity or not, what equipment would you need? • Power pack / battery • Wires • Bulb

  10. COMPOUND

  11. COMPOUND

  12. Practical – conductivity of compounds • Which compounds would you chose to investigate?

  13. Results • Do compounds of metals/non-metals conduct electricity when solid? • No • Do compounds of metals/non-metals conduct electricity when liquid? • Yes • Do compounds of metals/non-metals conduct electricity when dissolved? • Yes

  14. Results • Do compounds of non-metals/non-metals conduct electricity when solid? • No • Do compounds of non-metals/non-metals conduct electricity when liquid? • No • Do compounds of non-metals/non-metals conduct electricity when dissolved? • No

  15. Do they conduct electricity? • Solid sodium chloride (salt) • Solid glucose (C6H12O6) • Liquid potassium iodide • Solid methane • Dissolved lithium nitrate • CaO(s) • Al(OH)3(l) • CsCl(aq) • H2O2(l) • C12H22O11(aq)

  16. Do they conduct electricity? • Solid sodium chloride (salt) • Solid glucose (C6H12O6) • Liquid potassium iodide • Solid methane • Dissolved lithium nitrate • CaO(s) • Al(OH)3(l) • CsCl(aq) • H2O2(l) • C12H22O11(aq)

  17. Ions Standard Grade Chemistry Topic 7

  18. Ion migration Standard Grade Chemistry Topic 7

  19. Thought experiment

  20. Thought experiment: NaCl(aq)

  21. Thought experiment: C6H12O6(aq)

  22. Why the difference? • Types of elements present? • Types of particle each is made up of?

  23. Electrolysis Standard Grade Chemistry Topic 7

  24. Theory of dissolving / melting + + - - + - + + - - + - + - + - + - +

  25. + - + - - - - + + - + + - - + + - - + + Electrolysis + Copper - Chloride Why must a d.c. power supply be used? What happens to the mass of each electrode?

  26. Chemistry of electrolysis

  27. Why can ionic compounds conduct electricity? Standard Grade Chemistry Topic 7

  28. Conduction and molecules Solid Liquid or solution Particles can’t move freely Particles can move freely Does not conduct – no charged particles Does not conduct – no charged particles

  29. Conduction and ions + + - - + - + + - - + - + - + - + - + Solid Liquid or solution Particles can’t move freely Particles can move freely Does not conduct – ions can’t move freely Conducts – ions can move freely

  30. The rule • To conduct, charged particles must be able to move freely. • In compounds, the charged particles are ions. • The compound must be a liquid (melt) or dissolved to conduct.

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