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Matter chapter 3. Matter. Anything that has mass and occupies space Mass is measured in grams or kilograms Space or volume is measured in liters or cm 3. Phases. SOLIDS LIQUIDS GASES. Solid: definite volume definite shape. Liquid definite volume
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Matter Anything that has mass and occupies space • Mass is measured in grams or kilograms • Space or volume is measured in liters or cm3
Phases • SOLIDS • LIQUIDS • GASES
Solid: • definite volume • definite shape
Liquid • definite volume • indefinite shape • takes the shape of container
Gas • indefinite volume • indefinite shape • takes the shape and volume of container
source States of Matter How are the particles packed in each phase? How do the particles move in each phase? Why do liquids and gases flow? Why are gases so easy to compress?
4th Phase of matter • Plasma • exists in stars • electrons are stripped from atoms
Physical Properties • Describe the appearance and form of matter Words: • color, texture, luster, odor, solid, • liquid, gas Measurements: • a number and a unit
Intensive properties • Physical Constants • independent of sample size • Density, freezing point, and melting point • Solubility in water (g/ml)
Extensive Properties • Mass volume • depends on amount of matter in sample • Extensive propertiesdepend on quantity of matter
Chemical Properties • Describe how matter behaves in presence of other matter • Describe how matter changes intoanother kind of matter • Flammability • Resistance to corrosion • Ability to neutralize acids or bases
Chemical Prop. Reacts to form green copper carbonate Forms a deep blue solution when in contact with NH3 Forms new substances with HNO3 Properties of Copper Physical Prop. • Reddish brown • Shiny • Malleable • Ductile • Good Conductor • Density = 8.92 g/cm3 • MP = 1085C • BP = 2570C
Physical Change • The form or appearance of sample may change but identityremains same • Cutting, crushing, grinding,tearing • Phase changes • Dissolving
Dissolving • Dissolving is physical change • Think of sugar in water • still have sugar – you just spread it out with water molecules in between • C6H12O6(s) C6H12O6(aq)
Phase Changes • Phase changes are physical changes • No new substance is created (chemical formula stays the same) • Ex: • ice melting: H2O(s) H2O(l) • water boiling: H2O (l) H2O(g)
Chemical Change • chemical change - identity of matter is changed • new substance with unique properties is formed • The chemical formula changes • Ex: 2H2O(l) 2H2(g) + O2(g)
Burning • Common name for oxidation reaction • Burning means reacting with oxygen • Burning is chemical change, because original substance is changed into new kinds of matter Ex: CH4(g) + 2O2(g) CO2(g) + 2H2O(g)
Matter Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Heterogeneous Mixtures Homogeneous Mixtures Mixtures Separated by physical methods Compounds Separated by chemical methods
Element • Substance that: • cannot be broken down or decomposed into simpler substance • only 1 kind of atom • has definite properties • Formulas have 1 uppercase letter
Atom • smallest particle of element that retains propertiesofelement • smallest particles of element that can undergo a chemical reaction
Compounds • 2 or more elements chemically combined in a definite ratio • Properties are different from those of elements formed from • Homogeneous • Broken into elements by chemical decomposition reaction • Formulas have 2 or more uppercase letters
Mixtures • Combo of 2 or more pure substances • Physically combinednotchemically combined • Each substance retains its own identity and properties
Mixtures • Variable composition • No unique properties (Think of sugar and salt mixed together) • Separated byphysical methods • May be homogeneous or heterogeneous
Types of Mixtures • Heterogeneous: See aboundaryor regions that look different • Ex: Colloids Suspensions ice water granite
Colloids • particles larger than size of molecule but smaller than particles seen with naked eye • colloidal dispersion • consists of colloids in a dispersing medium • Ex: whipped cream, mayonnaise, milk, butter, gelatin, jelly, colored glass
Aerosols: • solid or liquid particles in gasEx: • Smoke: solid in a gas • Fog: liquid in a gas
Sols: • solid particles in a liquidEx: • Milk of Magnesia (solid magnesium hydroxide in water)
Emulsions: • liquid particles in liquidEx: • Mayonnaise: oil in water
Gels: • liquids in solidEx: • Gelatin: protein in water • Quicksand: sand in water
Suspensions • particles in suspensions are larger than those in solutions • components of suspension can be evenly distributed by mechanical means (shaking the contents) but components will settle out
Homogeneous: constant composition throughout, single phase • Ex: Solutions (all 3 phases) such as air, windex, kool-aid
Hints for Mixtures • Solutions in gas & liquid phases transmit light • particles not big enough to scatter light • look translucent • Suspensions look cloudy • particles big enough to scatter light • settle on standing
source source CuSO4(aq)
Particle Diagrams Atoms of a monatomic element Molecules of a diatomic element
Particle Diagrams Molecules of a triatomic compound Mixture: monatomic element, diatomic element, triatomic compound
Separating Mixtures • Physically combined • Separation based on physical properties • Sorting: size & appearance • Filtration: size solid in liquid • Distillation: different bp’s liquids mixed • Crystallization: solubility solid in liquid • Magnet: magnetization • Chromatography: solubility liquids mixed • “Travel” ability
source Distillation
source source Paper Chromatograhy
Crystallization source
Conservation of Mass Mass before = Mass after # of atoms before = # of atoms after