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Pearson Prentice Hall Physical Science: Concepts in Action. Chapter 2 Properties of Matter. WHATS A MATTA. Matter vs Non-matter (or I don’t know). Let’s create a definition. CHEMICAL VS PHYSICAL. Physical Properties. Examples of physical properties.
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Pearson Prentice Hall Physical Science: Concepts in Action Chapter 2 Properties of Matter
Examples of physical properties • Definition: a physical property is any characteristic of a material that can be observed or measured without changing the composition of the material • Here are some examples: • Viscosity- resistance of a liquid to flowing • Conductivity- ability of material to allow heat to flow • Malleability- ability of a solid to be hammered without shattering • Hardness- resistance to scratching • Melting point- the temperature at which a substance changes form solid to liquid • Boiling point- the temperature at which a substance boils • Density- the ratio of mass to volume or m/v
Pure substance is matter that always has exactly the same composition • A pure substance always has the same properties because the substance has a fixed, uniform composition • Element: an element is a substance that cannot be broken down in simpler substances. It is a single type of atom
Elements as pure substances • Elements contain only one type of atom • Elements have a fixed composition (due to only one type of atom) • Examples of elements: gold (Au), silver (Ag) and platinum (Pt) • Names of elements have one or two letters • If there is a second letter, it is not capitalized • http://www.chemicool.com/
Compounds as pure substances • Definition: a compound is a substance that is made from 2 or more simpler substances, AND can be broken down into simpler substances • A compound always contains 2 or more elements joined in a fixed proportion • Since compounds are matter that always contain the exact same elements in the exact same proportions, they are pure substances
Mixtures are not pure substances • Recall that a pure substance is matter that always has exactly the same composition • Mixtures vary in composition so they are not pure • The properties of a mixture can vary because the composition of the mixture is not fixed • Example: salsa- one batch may have more onions, fewer tomatoes or tons of peppers compared to another batch
Different types of mixtures • Definition: a heterogeneous mixture is not the same throughout • Example: fruit salad • Definition: a homogeneous mixture is the same throughout • Example: rubbing alcohol or milk • Mixtures are also classified by the size of the largest particles as solutions, suspensions or colloids
Usefulness of Physical Properties • Physical properties are used to identify a material, to choose a material for a specific purpose or to separate substances from a mixture • The methods often involve math since many physical properties are described by numbers (boiling point and melting point, for example)
Separating Mixtures • There are several ways • Here are some examples: • Filtration- separating substances based on the size of the particles (sand from water, for example) • Distillation- separation of substances based on their boiling points (requires that the boiling points are different from each other)
Magnetism- using magnetic property of some metals to separate from nonmagnetic materials • Density- some substances may float (less dense) in water, while others sink: using density this way allows separation of less dense substances from more dense substances such as driftwood floating on water
Recognizing Physical Changes • Definition: a physical change is a change in the physical form or properties of a substance that occurs without a change in composition • The substances in the material remain the same • Size and shape might change but not composition
Words that describe physical change • Examples of physical change include: • cutting, grinding, bending, water changing to steam, melting of ice • Some words that describe physical change: • boil, freeze, dissolve, melt, condense, break, split, crack, crush and dissolve
Physical or Chemical? • When matter undergoes a chemical change, the composition of the matter changes • When matter undergoes a physical change, the composition of the matter remains the same
Observing Chemical Properties • chemical property: is the ability to produce a change in the composition of matter • Chemical properties can be observed only when substances in a sample of matter are changing into different substances
Two types of chemical properties include flammability and reactivity • Flammability is a material’s ability to burn in the presence of oxygen • Reactivity is the ability of a substance to combine chemically with other substances
Observations of chemical change • Change in color, production of gas, formation of precipitate • Precipitate is any solid that forms when 2 liquids are mixed • Other examples of chemical change: • Burn, rot, rust, decompose, ferment, explode and corrode
CHEMICAL PHYSICAL PHYSICAL CHEMICAL CHEMICAL PHYSICAL PHYSICAL PHYSICAL