CHAPTER 2 PROPERTIES OF MATTER
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Transcript of CHAPTER 2 PROPERTIES OF MATTER
CHAPTER 2PROPERTIE
S OF MATTER
Chemists 6:45
PURE SUBSTANCESPURE SUBSTANCES• Matter w/ same composition
throughout– Table salt or sugar
• Every pinch tastes equally salty/sweet
• 2 categories:– Elements
– compounds
ELEMENTS• substance that cannot be broken
down into simpler substances.• fixed comp b/c it has only 1 type of
atom– Cutting copper wire into smaller and smaller
pieces until you end up with copper atoms
• No 2 elements contain same type atom
EXAMPLES OF ELEMENTS
•At room temp (20°C, or 68°F), most solids, some gases, 2 liquids
SYMBOLS FOR ELEMENTSSYMBOLS FOR ELEMENTS• 1813 - Jöns Berzelius
(Swedish chemist) suggested symbols
• 1 or 2 letters with 1st letter always CAPITALIZED
• If 2 letters, 2nd letter not cap• Some Latin name of elements
–Gold is Au (aurum)–Lead is Pb (plumbum)
COMPOUNDSCOMPOUNDS• Substance made of 2 or more simpler
substances • Can be broken down into simpler
substances (elements or other cmpds)• Always joined in fixed proportion
–H20 – 1 drop or 1 gallon, always 2 parts hydrogen for every 1 part oxygen
–Silicon dioxide (clear crystals in sand)
1 pt silicon : 2 pts oxygen
(di- means 2)
MIXTURESMIXTURES• Similar to cmpds b/c multiple
substances
• Different b/c properties can vary b/c composition NOT fixed– salsa – each bite has different amt of
onion, pepper, etc
– Pizza – each slice has diff amt toppings
HETEROGENEOUS HETEROGENEOUS MIXTURESMIXTURES
•parts of mixture noticeably different from one another
– Sand, trail mix, Lucky Charms, Italian salad dressing
Contents of Two Cans of Mixed NutsType of Nut Mass in
Brand AMass in Brand B
Peanut 152.39 g 191.96 g
Almond 47.02 g 31.18 g
Brazil Nut 57.88 g 19.60 g
Cashew 46.20 g 73.78 g
Hazelnut 19.90 g 16.90 g
Pecan 21.40 g 16.90 g
1.How are the two brands of mixed nuts alike? How are they different?
2.What is the percent by mass of each type of nut?
3.Do the contents of each can meet the FDA regulations? Explain.
4.On the Brand A label, the nuts are listed in this order: peanuts, Brazil nuts, almonds, cashews, pecans, and hazelnuts. What do you think determines the order?
HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURESHOMOGENEOUS MIXTURES•Substances evenly distributed •difficult to distinguish one substance from another•Appears to contain only one substance
• Stainless steel (iron, chromium, and nickel), Kool-Aid, and pool water
SOLUTIONS, SOLUTIONS, SUSPENSIONS, AND SUSPENSIONS, AND
COLLOIDSCOLLOIDS•3 major classifications of mixtures:
•Based on size of largest particles:
SOLUTIONSSOLUTIONS• small particles dissolved creating
a homogeneous mixture–Windshield washer fluid,
sweetened tea, Kool-Aid
• Particles too small to settle out, be trapped by filter, or scatter light
SUSPENSIONSSUSPENSIONS• Heterogeneous mixture separates
into layers over time– Italian salad dressing, dirt particles in
the air, quicksand
• Large particles can be trapped by filter and scatter light making suspensions cloudy
COLLOIDSCOLLOIDS
• Intermediate size particles – larger than solution, smaller than suspension
• Large enough to scatter light, too small to settle out / filtered– Milk, shaving cream, smoke, fog
Matter Concept map
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
SECTION 2.2
VISCOSITY•resistance to flow
•High viscosity slow flow
• high visc: – honey, lava, motor oil
• low visc: – water, vinegar, olive oil
•
CONDUCTIVITY•measure of material’s ability to allow flow of heat / electricity
•Metals high conductivity – called conductors
•Wood, rubber, and styrofoam low conductivity – poor conductors
MALLEABILITY
•Material’s ability to be hammered w/o shattering
• Most metals malleable
• ex. gold, lead, iron
HARDNESS•Material’s resistance to be scratched
•Harder substances
•“scratch” softer ones
•Grinding wheels high $ b/c
•Contains diamond chips
MELTING & BOILING POINTS
•Melting pt – solid to liquid
•Boiling pt – liquid to gas
•These characteristics can be used to separate substances out of mixtures
Melting and boiling points of Some Melting and boiling points of Some SubstancesSubstances
SubstanceSubstance Melting pointMelting point Boiling Boiling pointpoint
Hydrogen -259.3°C -252.9°C
Nitrogen -210.0°C -195.8°C
Ammonia -77.7°C -33.3°C
Octane (in gasoline)
-56.8°C 125.6°C
Water 0.0°C 100.0°C
Acetic acid (in vinegar)
16.6°C 117.9°C
Table salt 800.7°C 1465°C
Gold 1064.2°C 2856°C
On On p.47p.47
DENSITY•Tests purity of substances
•Mass - volume ratio
•Methanol is fuel burned in some racing motorcycles.
•Must be 99.65% pure
USING PROPERTIES TO SEPARATE MIXTURES
•FILTRATION
•Separating materials based on size of particles
• brewing coffee
• iced tea
•
DISTILLATION
•When solution can’t be filtered, distillation used
•Distillation provides fresh water for submarines
•Fresh H2O and sea H2O separated b/c differences in boiling pts
RECOGNIZING PHYSICAL CHANGES
•Physical change – some properties of a material change, but substance remains same
•Ex. Melting ice cream, cut hair, crumple paper
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
SECTION 2.3
OBSERVING CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
•Candle burns causes hydrogen and carbon from paraffin to turn into carbon dioxide (new substance that was not originally present) •Chemical properties observed only when substances are changing into different substances
FLAMMABILITY
•Burning in presence of OXYGEN
•Burning substances used as fuel
• Gasoline
• coal
• wood
•Sometimes not desirable
• Children’s sleepwear – low flammability
• Difficult to ignite
• Burns slowly
REACTIVITY
•When oxygen from air reacts with iron from car & water from air…..rust forms completely new substance………• Oxygen + water + iron = iron oxide (rust)•Nitrogen is less reactive – N gas used in submarine tanks to replace reactive O gas
RECOGNIZING CHEMICAL CHANGES
•Look for:
• gas produced
• heat produced
• **change in color
• precipitate (solid) formed
•**Color change alone can also be physical change
IS A CHANGE CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL?
•Color change as physical change…despite color change, iron is still iron
•Gas produced as physical change/…water boiling changes phases (liquid to gas) but still H2O
PHYSICAL V.S. CHEMICAL CHANGE
•When matter undergoes
chemical changechemical change, comp of matter changes
•When matter undergoes physical physical changechange, comp remains same