Mixtures & Solutions

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Mixtures & Solutions. Essential Questions. What is a mixture? What is a solution? What is the difference between a mixture and a solution? How can materials in a mixture or solution be separated?. How many of you like trail mix?. In this trail mix you will see M&M’s, chocolate chips, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Mixtures & Solutions

Page 1: Mixtures  &  Solutions
Page 2: Mixtures  &  Solutions

Essential Questions• What is a mixture?

• What is a solution?

• What is the difference between a mixture and a solution?

• How can materials in a mixture or solution be separated?

Page 3: Mixtures  &  Solutions

How many of you like trail mix?

In this trail mix you will see M&M’s, chocolate chips, raisins, & nuts. If you like ONLY M&M’s, you can pick out just the M&M’s. All of these ingredients can be

separated easily using purely physical means – which makes it a MIXTURE.

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Mixtures• A mixture is two or more materials that are

combined without changing any of them.

Look at this salad- what

makes this salad a mixture?

You can separate all the ingredients: Tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, lettuce,and bean sprouts- and its still a salad.

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Mixtures• The substances in a mixture usually keep

most or all of its own characteristics.

• Items used in a mixture can be separated using physical methods. Like in a pizza, if you don’t like pepperoni- you can pick them off- but it’s still a pizza!

Using more scientific examples, you could use a magnet to pull iron filings out of a mixture of iron filings and salt.

You could use a filter to separate sand and water.

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MixturesThere are many kinds of mixtures.

• A solid with a solid. You can mix two solids together. Rocks (solid) in sand (solid).• A solid with a liquid. You could mix a solid with a liquid. Sand (solid) in water (liquid).• Liquid with liquid or gas. Liquid can also be mixed. You can mix water (liquid) & salad oil (liquid). Soda drinks are

mixtures of liquid and gas• Gas mixtures. Even gases can be mixed. Air is oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and other gases.

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Mixtures

Everything can be separated intodifferent parts. This is what makesit a mixture.

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Solutions• Now that you have an understanding of

what a mixture is, lets move on to solutions.

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Solutions• A solution is a special type of mixture.

• In a solution, one substance dissolves into another. It spreads evenly throughout the mixture.

• Not every mixture is a solution. Only some things can dissolve in others. When something will not dissolve, you can still see it.

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Solutions• Think what happens when a spoon of sugar is

stirred in a glass of hot water. The sugar seems to disappear into the water.

• Where does the sugar go? It actually breaks down into tiny particles. These sugar particles are surrounded by water particles (molecules).

• That is why the sugar seems to “disappear.”

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Solutions• In a solution, the ingredients may change

some of their properties and keep others.

• The sugar that dissolved in the water no longer looks like white crystals, but the solution still tastes sweet from the sugar.

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Solutions• It is harder to separate the ingredients of a

solution than other mixtures. The best way to separate them is often to boil or evaporate the liquid.

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Remember, In a mixture- substances can be separated- Solutions can not!

http://www.harcourtschool.com/activity/mixture/mixture.html

http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/ks2bitesize/science/materials/reversible_irreversible_changes/play.shtml (physical and chemical

changes – read

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What Would Happen…

if you added sand to water? Would it dissolve?

No- Sand does not dissolve in water rather the particles fall

to the bottom of the container. Sand in water is NOT a

solution.

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Solubility• Solubility is the measure of

how well one substance dissolves in another. – Ex. Salad Dressing- As

you’ve already learned, oil and water cannot dissolve in each other. Oil is not soluble in water.

– Same with sand- Sand is not soluble in water therefore the solubility is zero!

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Examples of Mixtures and Solutions

Mixtures-mud, latex paint, cake batter, vinaigrette salad dressing, milk, foam (bubble bath), blacktop, concrete

Solutions-Kool-aid, seawater, vinegar, antifreeze, gasoline, metal alloys like steel, brass, and bronze.

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Which of these is a mixture?

A. Apple

B. Broccoli

C. Ham sandwich

D. Carrot stick

Let’s Review

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Which of these is a mixture?

A. Pail of sand and soil

B. Copper wire

C. Ring of pure gold

D. Pinch of salt

Let’s Review

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Which of these is an example of a solution?

A. Granola

B. Iced tea

C. Pizza

D. Salad

Let’s Review

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Name a substance besides sand and oil that are not

soluble in water.

Let’s Review

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• Using a Venn Diagram, compare and contrast mixtures and solutions.

Let’s Review

Mixtures

Solutions