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Explore the physical and chemical properties of matter in this informative chapter. Learn about elements, compounds, mixtures, and the usefulness of physical properties in identifying and separating substances. Discover examples of physical and chemical changes that matter can undergo.
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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
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