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Chemical vs. Physical
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Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Mar 31, 2015

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Ronan Waits
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Page 1: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Chemical vs. Physical

Page 2: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 3: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 4: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 5: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 6: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 7: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 8: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 9: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 10: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 11: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 12: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 13: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

Dissolving Ionic Compounds is a little bit of a Gray area, but is considered to be a

Physical Change.

Page 14: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Change doesn’t involve breaking and/or making Bonds

In General, Physical Changes are easily reversed,

Chemical Changes are not!

Page 15: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

In General, Physical Changes are easily reversed,

Chemical Changes are not!

Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds

Page 16: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

In the Lab, you can’t see the bonds being broken and/or made!

• How do you tell if a change is a Chemical Reaction or a Physical Change?

Page 17: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

Page 18: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

Page 19: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

3. Gas Produced

Page 20: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

3. Gas Produced

4. Precipitate Formed

Page 21: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

3. Gas Produced

4. Precipitate Formed

Page 22: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

3. Gas Produced

4. Precipitate Formed-Usually see clear solution turn cloudy before solid settles.

Page 23: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

3. Gas Produced

4. Precipitate Formed-Usually see clear solution turn cloudy before solid settles.

Be aware of Physical Changes that can APPEAR to be Chemical!

Page 24: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change – Watch for Color Mixing

2. Heat and/or Light Produced

3. Gas Produced

4. Precipitate Formed-Usually see clear solution turn cloudy before solid settles.

Be aware of Physical Changes that can APPEAR to be Chemical!

Page 25: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change – Watch for Color Mixing

2. Heat and/or Light Produced – Some Physical Changes produce heat

3. Gas Produced

4. Precipitate Formed-Usually see clear solution turn cloudy before solid settles.

Be aware of Physical Changes that can APPEAR to be Chemical!

Page 26: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change – Watch for Color Mixing

2. Heat and/or Light Produced – Some Physical Changes produce heat

3. Gas Produced – Watch for release of trapped gas, or boiling

4. Precipitate Formed-Usually see clear solution turn cloudy before solid settles.

Be aware of Physical Changes that can APPEAR to be Chemical!

Page 27: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

4 OBSERVATIONS that Tend to indicate that a change is Chemical:1. Color Change – Watch for Color Mixing

2. Heat and/or Light Produced – Some Physical Changes produce heat

3. Gas Produced – Watch for release of trapped gas, or boiling

4. Precipitate Formed- Adding a solid that doesn’t dissolve doesn’t count!

Be aware of Physical Changes that can APPEAR to be Chemical!

Page 28: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Chemical Properties(AKA “Will they react?”)

• Sodium reacts with water

• Gold does not react with acids

• Hydrogen reacts with oxygen

• Copper does not react with salt (NaCl)

Page 29: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Properties:Can be measured without trying to

react the substance.• Sodium is malleable

• Gold has a density of 19 g/mL

• Hydrogen is colorless

• Copper conducts electricity

Page 30: Chemical vs. Physical. Chemical Change involves breaking and/or making Bonds.

Physical Properties:Can be measured without trying to

react the substance.• Sodium is malleable

• Gold has a density of 19 g/mL

• Hydrogen is colorless

• Copper conducts electricity

Note that color is a Physical Property, but a color CHANGE is an indication of a

Chemical Reaction.