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Matter and Change. Chemistry RHS Mr. Moss. Whatchathinkboutit ?. Write your definition of the term Chemistry . Include thoughts about what you think this field includes. Chemistry.
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Matter and Change Chemistry RHS Mr. Moss
Whatchathinkboutit? • Write your definition of the term Chemistry. • Include thoughts about what you think this field includes.
Chemistry • The study of the composition, structure, and properties of matter, the processes that matter undergoes, and the energy changes that accompany those processes. • Answers questions such as: • What is the makeup of this material? • What changes when I heat or cool a substance? • Why do these materials behave this way when mixed? • Etc…
Matter, Mass, and Volume • What is Matter? • Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. • What is Mass? • Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. • It’s the reading we get when we measure something on the balance. • Mass IS NOT the same thing as weight. • Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. • Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on the matter. • An astronaut has the SAME mass on Earth as on the Moon but 1/6th the weight. • What is Volume? • Volume is the amount of 3-dimensional space that an object occupies.
Matter • Matter comes in many forms. • The fundamental building blocks of matter are Atomsand Molecules. • Atoms are the smallest unit of an element that maintains the chemical identity of the element. • Elements are pure substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances and are made of only one type of atom. • Compounds are substances that can be broken down into simpler substances and are made from atoms of two or more elements that are chemically bonded.
States or Phases of Matter • Matter exists in one of four states or phases • Solid • Liquid • Gas • Plasma • Classification can be made by determining whether the shape and volume are definite or variable. • Definite means that it does not change when transferred from one container to another.
Solid • Definite Shape • Definite Volume • Atoms not free to move • Vibrate or oscillate in place • Distance between molecules are is short • Strong attractive forces. • Not easily compressible
Kinetic Theory in Solids • Solids have a definite volume and shape because particles in a solid vibrate around fixed locations. • Each atom vibrates around its location but it does not exchange places with its neighbor. • The particles are held close together by the strong attractive forces between them.
Liquid • No definite shape • Takes shape of container • Definite Volume • Molecules are close but are free to move past one another. • The attractive forces are moderate. • Not easily compressible
Kinetic Theory of Liquids • Attractive forces affect movement of particles. • Tug-of-War between attraction and constant motion. • Liquids take the shape of the container and can flow to new locations. • The volume is constant due to the forces of attraction keeping particles close together.
Gas • No Definite Shape • Takes shape of container • No Definite Volume • Take the volume of the container • The molecules move independently. • The attractive forces are weak. • Large distance between molecules • Compressible • Pressure is caused by molecules colliding with the walls of the container.
Kinetic Theory of Gases • The total kinetic energy of the atoms stays the same. • During a collision, one speeds up and the other slows down by the same amount. • The constant motion of particles in a gas allows a gas to fill a container of any shape or size. • 3 main points: • Particles are in constant, random motion • The motion of one is unaffected by the motion of another unless they collide. • Forces of attraction are weak and can therefore be ignored.
Plasma • High temperature highly ionized gas like substance. • Ionized means electrically charged particles. • No definite shape or volume. • 99% of known matter is made of plasma. • Not normally found on Earth • Most of the matter of the stars and sun. • Lightning, fire, aurora borealis, fluorescent lights • Atoms have the most energy of the four phases.
A fifth phase??? • Predicted by Einstein after reading a paper written by Satyendra Bose in the 1920’s. • Occurs at extremely low temperatures • Near 0 Kelvin • Called the Bose-Einstein condensate.
Properties of Matter • The properties of matter are used by chemist to define or identify an unknown substance. • Properties are either Extensive or Intensive. • Extensive Properties depend on the amount of matter that is present. • Volume, Mass, and the amount of Energy present. • Intensive Properties do not depend on the amount of matter present. • Melting/Boiling Point, Density, and Conductivity.
Properties of Matter • The properties of matter can be grouped into two general types: • Physical • Chemical
Physical Properties • A Physical Property is a characteristic that can be observed or measured without changing the identity of the substance. • A physical change is a change in a substance that does not involve a change in the identity of the substance.
Physical Properties • Viscosity • Resistance to flow. The higher the number, the slower the flow. • Density • mass per unit volume (m / v) • Solubility • The ability of a substance to dissolve in another substance. • Melting / Freezing / Boiling points • Conductivity • Malleability • Hardness
Physical Properties • Melting / Freezing / Boiling points • Conductivity • Malleability • Hardness • Color • Temperature • Mass • Volume • Phase • Shape
Physical Change • Any change in a substance in which the composition of the substance does not change. • Examples: • Melting butter • Slicing a tomato • Braiding / cutting hair • Crumpling paper • Some physical changes are reversible and some are not. • Reversible: Freezing – melting – refreezing water • Non reversible: slicing a tomato and cutting hair.
Chemical Properties • Any ability to produce a change in the composition of matter. • Chemical properties can be observed only when the substances in a sample of matter are changing into different substances. • The composition of the substance has been altered.
Chemical Properties • Flammability • ability to burn in the presence of oxygen. • Reactivity • Describes how readily a substance combines chemically with other substances.
Chemical Change • Occurs when a substance reacts and forms one or more new substances. • There is a change in the arrangement of atoms. • Chemical bonds are broken and reformed. • Example: • Cake baking in oven • Leaves changing color • Digestion of food • Combustion
Chemical Change • Three common types of evidence to look for: • CHANGE IN COLOR • PRODUCTION OF A GAS • FORMATION OF A PRECIPITATE
Key Question • Are different substances present after the change takes place?