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What Else Besides Water?. Introduction to Matter. Matter. = anything that occupies space and has mass =easiest categorized by it’s physical states either a solid, liquid or gas. Physical States of Matter. Solids – have a definite shape and volume
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What Else Besides Water? Introduction to Matter
Matter = anything that occupies space and has mass =easiest categorized by it’s physical states either a solid, liquid or gas
Physical States of Matter • Solids – have a definite shape and volume • Individual particles are arranged very close together so that there is very little motion and no room for compression • Crystalline solids – particles arranged in regular, systematic patterns (sugar, salt) • Amorphous solids – some freedom of motion of the particles ( glass, rubber, wax)
Physical States of Matter • Liquids – have fixed volume but variable in shape. • Particles are not held together as rigidly as the solid state • They can slide past one another so the sample is said to flow or be fluid • They take on the shape of the container • Volume of sample remains constant
Physical States of Matter • Gases– have no volume or fixed shape • Particles are not attracted to each other but rather expand to fill any conatiner • Particles are in constant random motion and move about independently • Distance between them is greater than in a solid or liquid. • Can be compressed into a smaller space, within limits
Matter • All types of matter contain energy. • More specifically kinetic energy = the energy of motion • How much kinetic energy is determined by the physical state or property of the sample of matter • The properties are a result of how the individual particles that make up the sample are arranged
How Does The Physical State Effect the Amount of Energy in a Given Sample? • Solid – very little kinetic energy • Liquid - more random movement of particles so there is more energy • Gas – particles move constantly and independently. Generally – has more energy than a solid or liquid
Conversion From One Physical State to Another Ice to Water to Gas Solid - below 0ºC (freezing point) Liquid – between 0ºC and 100ºC (melting point) Gas (steam) – converted to once it reaches 100ºC (boiling point)
What is Heat Energy? • Heat is added to disrupt the rigid structure of the solid • More energy added tight interaction of particles is broken and free to move in liquid state • When additional energy is added the particles are freed from each other are in the gaseous state
Properties Of MatterWhether they are solid, liquid or gas • Physical properties– those that can be observed or measured without changing the composition of the sample of matter. • Chemical properties – describes the ability of a sample of matter to be converted into a different sample of matter
Physical Properties When a physical property is changes we say it is a physical change • A physical change is a change in the form of matter but not in its chemical identity. • No new compounds are formed during a physical change.
What is a Physical change? • When ice melts and becomes water
What about tearing a big piece of paper into smaller pieces or chopping wood into smaller pieces? Physical change • Have only made the size of the sample smaller
Chemical PropertiesDescribe the ability of a sample of matter to be converted into a different sample of matter • All of the original substance must be accounted for • Law of Conservation of Matter – matter may not be created or destroyed in a chemical transformation. This chemical change (transformation) involves the rearrangement of the atoms to form some new type(s) of matter.
Questions to ask – • Does it burn in air? • Does it decompose when heated? • What happens when it is placed in acid? • What other chemicals will the sample of matter react with and what is produced? • Chemical changes are usually irreversible. • New compounds are formed during a chemical change
Physical and chemical properties… • Describe a sample of matter • In most cases is does not matter what the size of the matter is it will still have the same properties • These properties are called intensive properties
Describing an Iron Nail • . • Physical Properties = heavy, malleable, ductile, silvery-white color and can take and retain a magnetic field • Chemical Properties = • The rusting of iron is an example of a chemical change. • Reaction = moisture and oxygen in • the air forms a compound called an oxide • The rust has a different chemical • composition than the initial iron
Breaking Glassbefore after Breaking GlassChemical or Physical Change?