Top Banner
Diagrams that are examples and non- examples of a specific concept will be shown Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds the examples Keep your observations to yourself, we will share them with each other later Test diagrams will follow to see if you have made the right observations
38

Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Dec 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Dorcas Watson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown

Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds the examples

Keep your observations to yourself, we will share them with each other later

Test diagrams will follow to see if you have made the right observations

Page 2: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 3: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 4: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 5: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 6: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 7: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 8: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 9: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 10: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 11: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 12: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Examples1) Sand in water2) Quartz crystal3) Cigarette smoke4) Brass trumpet5) Pepper

Non-examples1) Distilled water2) Diamond crystal3) Neon gas in tube4) Silver trumpet5) Salt

Page 13: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

What do you think?

What do all the examples have in common?

What do all the non-examples have in common?

Page 14: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 15: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 16: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 17: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 18: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.
Page 19: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

All the examples showed pictures of mixtures sand in water, quartz crystal, cigarette

smoke, brass trumpet, pepper, milk, oil in water, salt water, honey

All the non-examples were pictures of pure substances distilled water, diamond, neon gas, silver

trumpet, salt, pencil lead

Page 20: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Matter Flowchart

MATTER

Can it be physically separated?

Homogeneous Mixture

(solution)

Heterogeneous Mixture Compound Element

MIXTURE PURE SUBSTANCE

yes no

Can it be chemically decomposed?

noyesIs the composition uniform?

noyes

Colloids Suspensions

Page 21: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

A pure substance contains only one kind of molecule.

That molecule can be either an element or a compound.

Ex. Water is a compound of H-O-H. Ex. A diamond is an element molecule of

C-C-C (n) It can’t be separated by physical means

Element Compound

Page 22: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Elements are composed of identical atoms

EX: copper wire, aluminum foil

Page 23: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Compounds are made of two or more different elements in a fixed proportion

EX: Salt (NaCl)

Page 24: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

A) A clear, colourless liquid that can be chemically split into two gases – each with different properties

B) A yellow solid that always has the same properties and cannot be broken down chemically

C) A colourless gas that burns in oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water

Page 25: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures

Variable combination of 2 or more pure substances (or other mixtures).

Heterogeneous Homogeneous

Page 26: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

A homogeneous mixture is a mixture with only one visible phase (dissolved substance in solvent)

Page 27: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Original state of solute Solvent Examples

Gas Gas Air, natural gas

Gas Liquid Carbonated drinks, water in rivers containing oxygen

Gas Solid Hydrogen in platinum

Liquid Gas Water vapour in air, gasoline-air mixture

Liquid Liquid Alcohol in water, antifreeze

Liquid Solid Amalgams, such as mercury in silver

Solid Gas Mothballs in air

Solid Liquid Sugar or salt in water

Solid Solid Alloys, copper-nickel in coins

Page 28: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures: Heterogeneous

Solutions homogeneous small-sized particles No Tyndall effect (do not scatter light) particles don’t settle EX: tea

Page 29: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures: Homogeneous

Some metals that we use every day exist because they are mixtures.

Bronze = tin + copper

Brass = copper + zinc

These metal mixtures are called ALLOYS

Page 30: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures: Heterogeneous

Colloids homogeneous medium-sized particles Tyndall effect (do scatter light) particles don’t settle EX: milk

Page 31: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture with two or more visible phases

Page 32: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures: HeterogeneousSuspension

heterogeneous large particles Tyndall effect (do scatter light) particles settle EX: fresh-squeezed

lemonade

Page 33: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures & the Tyndall Effect- scattering of light by particles - a way to tell the difference

between solutions and colloids and suspensions

Page 34: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Mixtures & the Tyndall Effect

Page 35: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Laser light passes through Laser light passes through Laser light does NOT pass No scattering with scattering through – most/all light is

scattered

Mixtures & the Tyndall Effect

Page 36: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

More Terms…

Page 37: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

Each Element is made of one kind of atom.

An atom is the smallest indivisible particle of matter

Page 38: Diagrams that are examples and non-examples of a specific concept will be shown  Make your own observations and try to notice what concept surrounds.

A molecule is a combination of two or more atoms

Oxygen HydrogenWater