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Reminder. Extra help Tuesdays 8:10 – 9:00 pm Thursdays 7:00 – 8:00 pm. Classification of Matter. physical change : the chemical composition (makeup or parts) of the matter stays the same . Ex: state changes (solid to liquid to gas), changing shape (ripping, squishing)
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Reminder Extra help Tuesdays 8:10 – 9:00 pm Thursdays 7:00 – 8:00 pm
physicalchange: the chemical composition (makeup or parts) of the matter stays the same. • Ex: state changes (solid to liquid to gas), changing shape (ripping, squishing) • Can be used to separate a mixture into a pure substance, but not a pure substance into its elements.
chemicalchange: a compound’s chemical composition (makeup) is changed – it becomes a new substance • ex: burning, rusting, reacting
Chemical or Physical Change? • burning paper • folding a piece of paper • the reaction of KI and Pb(NO3)2 • combustion of gasoline • hammering gold into a ring • cutting a diamond • acid rain “melting” a statue • a pile of old iron rusting • separating water into H and O by using electricity
MATTER Mixture Pure Substance Homogeneous Mixture Heterogeneous Mixture Compound Element Atom Physically separated Chemically separated Can’t be separated
matter: has volume (takes up space), and mass • can be solid, liquid or gas • mixture: several different substances NOT chemically combined, can be physically separated into pure substances • homogeneous: evenly mixed (solution) • ex: salt water, air • heterogeneous: not evenly mixed • ex: sand, soup
pure substance: constant (same) composition, • ex: water H2O or lead Pb • compound: chemically bonded elements ex: CO2
element: can not be separated physically or chemically, made of a single kind of atom • atom: smallest particles of an element, can not be chemically separated
MOLECULES ELEMENT COMPOUND MIXTURE
Monatomic Diatomic ex: noble gases: He, NE, Ar, Kr… Ex: halogens: F2, Cl2, Br2, H2
MATTER Mixture Pure Substance Homogeneous Mixture Heterogeneous Mixture Compound Element Atom Physically separated Chemically separated Can’t be separated
Matter that can be physically separated and is uniform (evenly mixed). • Matter that can not be physically separated. • Matter that can not be physically separated and can not be decomposed (broken apart) by chemical means. • Matter that can be physically separated. • Matter that can be physically separated but does not have a uniform (evenly mixed) composition.
Matter that can not be physically separated but can be decomposed (broken down) by chemical means. • Can an element be broken down chemically? • How is a mixture different from a pure substance? • How is an element different from a compound?
Homework • Classification of Matter 1 • 2: put the word “physically” before the word “separated” in every part (a – f)
Element or compound? • neon • sodium bichlorate • silver • potassium chloride • carbon dioxide • helium • element • compound • element • compound • compound • element
An unknown silvery powder has a constant melting point and does not chemically or physically separate into other substances. The unknown substance can be classified as – A. an element B. a compound C. a mixture D. an alloy
Which of the following is an example of a chemical change? A. Ice cracking B. Sugar dissolving C. Milk souring D. Lead melting
Which of these describes a pollution-producing process that involves only a physical change? A. Coal with a high sulfur content is burned, producing gases that cause acid rain. B. Chlorofluorocarbons are released, changing ozone in the upper atmosphere into oxygen. C. Hot wastewater is discharged into a lake, lowering oxygen levels in the water. D. Nitrogen oxide emissions combine with water vapor, producing nitric acid.
Which of the following processes is an example of a physical change associated with an oak tree? A. Decomposition of bark by bracket fungi. B. Starches and sugars being broken down during energy production. C. Water and carbon dioxide being converted to glucose. D. Evaporation of water from the surface of the leaves.
Which of the following represents a physical property? a. Copper tarnishes to green when weathered. b. Oxygen is flammable when ignited. c. Iron rusts when exposed to oxygen. d. Ice melts if left at room temperature.
A student examines a sample of matter and finds that she can’t separate it into its parts physically or chemically. This matter is: a. an element b. a homogeneous mixture c. a heterogeneous mixture d. a gas
Which of the following represents a chemical change? a. A piece of paper is ripped in half. b. A piece of paper is folded in half. c. A piece of paper is burned. d. A piece of paper is frozen in the freezer.
One example of a pure substance is: a. paper b. cookie dough c. rocks and sand d. water
Separating a mixture Physical or Chemical? Physical
solvent: the part of a solution doing the dissolving (the liquid) • solute: a substance being dissolved in a liquid • solution: the mixture of a solvent and a solute SOLUTE SOLUTION SOLUTION SOLVENT
soluble: dissolves in a solvent • insoluble: does not dissolve
filtration: mixture is poured into a mesh (filter), though which the liquid passes. The solid is left behind.
volatility: how easily a substance becomes a gas • distillation: separation of a mixture of liquids with different volatilities, by evaporating, condensing and collecting each liquid.
evaporation: a very simple distillation of a mixture when only one compound is volatile • ex: water and sand; water and salt
chromatography: separation of a mixture made of substances of different masses that move at different speeds.
Experiment • What color is black ink? • Is ink a mixture or pure substance? • How could we find out?
What method would you use… • to separate sand from water? • to separate two kinds of paint mixed with one another? • to separate gasoline from water? • to separate salt from water?