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Chemistry. Describing Matter Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Dec 21, 2015

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Edwin Norman
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Page 1: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Chemistry

Page 2: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Describing Matter Matter – anything

that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal

wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Page 3: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Most matter exists in three states!

Solids – have a definite shape and volume. The atoms of solids are in a fixed

position and are closely packed together.

Page 4: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Liquids Liquids have a definite

volume but no shape of its own.

The atoms are free to move, which allow liquids to flow from place to place.

Page 5: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Gases

Gases – have no definite shape or volume. The atoms of gases spread apart filling

all the space available.

Page 6: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Melting

The change from a solid to a liquid is called melting. As a substance is melting, the particles

of a solid are vibrating so fast that they break free from their fixed position.

Page 7: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Freezing The change of state

from a liquid to a solid is called freezing. At its freezing

temperature, the particles of a liquid are moving so slowly they begin to solidify.

Gasoline freezes at -184 C

Page 8: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Vaporization Vaporization – liquid to

a gas Two types of

vaporization Evaporation –

vaporization that takes place on the surface of a liquid.

Boiling – occurs when liquid changes to a gas below its surface as well as at the surface.

Page 9: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Condensation

Gas turns into a liquid. Condensation occurs when particles in a gas lose enough energy to form a liquid.

Page 10: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.
Page 11: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Chemistry Chemistry is the

study of matter and how it changes. Iron changes to rust

in the presence of water and oxygen.

A pure substance is a single kind of matter that is pure, meaning it always has a specific makeup-or composition. The two types of pure substances are: Elements Compound

Page 12: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Compounds Elements are the simplest

substances. They are composed of just

one pure substance. A compound is a pure substance

made of two or more elements chemically combined in a set ratio. (It can be represented by a chemical formula). CO2 is the chemical formula

for the compound carbon dioxide.

C12H22O11 is the chemical formula for the compound table sugar.

Page 13: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Mixtures A mixture is made of two or more substances –

elements, compounds, or both that are together in the same place but are not chemically combined.

Mixtures can be separated by magnetic attraction, filtration, and vaporization.

Page 14: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Types of Mixtures Homogenous Mixture

– the substances are so evenly mixed that you cant see the different parts.

Heterogeneous Mixture – you can see the different parts. Salads and soil is examples of heterogeneous mixtures.

Page 15: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Solution a mixture of two or more substances that is identical

throughout can be physically separated composed of solutes and solvents

the substance in the smallest amount and the one that dissolves in the solvent

the substance in the larger

amount that dissolves the solute

Iced Tea Mix(solute)

Water(solvent)

Iced Tea(solution)

Salt water is considered a

solution. How

can it be physically separated?

Page 16: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Solubility the amount of solute that dissolves in a

certain amount of a solvent at a given temperature and pressure to produce a saturated solution

influenced by:

Temperature Pressure

Solids increased temperature causes them to be more soluble and vice versa

Gases increased temperature causes them to be less soluble and vice versa

Ex. Iced Coffee

Solids increased pressure has no effect on solubility

Gases increased pressure causes them to be more soluble and vice versa

Ex. Soda, “The Bends”

What do we call things that are not soluble?

Page 17: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Physical Change or Chemical Change?

Physical Change occurs when a substance changes in shape, size or state of matter BUT it remains the same substance.

Ex:Tearing a piece of paper, melting ice, evaporating alcohol, crushing chalk.

Phase changes are always PHYSICAL! What are the 6 phase changes?

Page 18: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Comparing Physical and Chemical Changes

Page 19: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

Chemical Changes

Occurs when One or more substances combine or decompose to form a NEW substance. Elements combine and recombine, breaking and/or forming new bonds.

Ex: burning wood, baking bread, rusting metals, fire works exploding

Page 20: Chemistry. Describing Matter  Matter – anything that has a mass and takes up space. Air, plastic, metal wood, glass, paper, and water are all matter.

4 Evidences of Chemical Changes

1. Color change2. Gas is produced

- bubbles, odor, explosion3. Temperature change

-Exothermic- Gives off Heat-Endothermic- Absorbs heat

4. Precipitation: a solid is formed