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5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2
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5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

5-2 Notes – Forming Solids

Chapter 5, Lesson 2

Page 2: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements

and have many useful properties.

Page 3: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• usually shiny

Page 4: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• good conductors of electricity and heat

because their electrons are free to move

Page 5: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• solid at room temperature

Page 6: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• high melting point and high boiling point

Page 7: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• malleable - ability to be hammered or rolled

into sheets

Page 8: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals• ductile - ability to be pulled into a wire

Page 9: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• Metals can bond to atoms of the same element, or to other metals

• A metallic bond is a bond formed when many metal atoms share their pooled electrons.

Metals

Page 10: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• Atoms (or molecules) of metal in solids pack together as closely as possible in a regular, three-dimensional pattern

• Metal atoms combine in regular patterns in which some electrons are free to move from atom to atom.

• In a metal, individual atoms lose electrons to become positive ions.

Metals

Page 11: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• Crystals are regular, repeating arrangements of atoms, ions, or molecules.

• Crystals can be held together by metallic, ionic, or covalent bonds.

Crystals

Page 12: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• A unit cell is the smallest repeating pattern that shows how the atoms, ion, or molecules are arranged in a crystal.

Crystals

Page 13: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• One common crystal is table salt, also known as sodium chloride.– Sodium chloride, NaCl, is an

ionic crystal.– Ionic crystals are brittle, unlike

solid metals.

Crystals

Page 14: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• “poly” means many.• Polymers are covalent compounds

made up of many small, repeating units linked together in a chain.

• A monomer is a small molecule that forms a link in a polymer chain.

• Many hundreds of monomers link together to form a solid polymer.

Polymers

Page 15: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Polymers

Page 16: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• Some polymers are synthetic. This means they are human-made in a factory.

• Polyethylene is a synthetic polymer used for grocery bags and food wrap.

Polymers

Page 17: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• Organic polymers are polymers that contain the element carbon and are involved with life.

• Carbon has 4 valence electrons. • It NEEDS 4 more to make 8. • Carbon SHARES its 4 valence electrons

in 4 covalent bonds.

Polymers

Page 18: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• All living cells must contain three important kinds of natural organic polymers:

1. proteins

2. carbohydrates

3. nucleic acids

Polymers

Page 19: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• The monomer of a protein is an amino acid, which includes carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen atoms.

Polymers

Page 20: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

• The monomer of a carbohydrate (also called a polysaccharide) is a sugar molecule called a monosaccharide.

Polymers

Page 21: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

What holds carbohydrates together?

A ionic bonds

B metallic bonds

C covalent bonds

D electron clouds

5.2 Forming Solids

Page 22: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Which of the following is the most malleable?

A crystal

B polymer

C metal

D monomer

5.2 Forming Solids

Page 23: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

A(n) ____ is the smallest repeating pattern in a crystal.

A monomer

B polymer

C metallic bond

D unit cell

5.2 Forming Solids

Page 24: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Which is an example of a natural polymer?

A sodium chloride

B polyethylene

C polysaccharide

D quartz

Page 25: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

A polymer is made up of many repeating monomers held together by ____.

A metallic bonds

B polymer chains

C ionic bonds

D covalent bonds

Page 26: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Metals are good conductors because ____.

A their electrons move freely

B their protons move freely

C they have ionic bonds

D none of the above

SCI 3.c

Page 27: 5-2 Notes – Forming Solids Chapter 5, Lesson 2. Metals Metals make up about 2/3 of the elements and have many useful properties.

Which property of copper allows it to be pulled into wires?

A ductility

B malleability

C conductivity

D luster

SCI 7.c