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Matter

Matter. Classification, Properties And Changes. Classification of Matter. Substances vs Mixtures. Substances = fixed ratio; can not be separated using physical properties. Elements - periodic table Compounds – 2 or more elements combined

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Matter

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  1. Matter Classification, Properties And Changes

  2. Classification of Matter

  3. Substances vs Mixtures Substances = fixed ratio; can not be separated using physical properties. Elements - periodic table Compounds – 2 or more elements combined Mixtures = variable ratio; can be separated using physical properties. Homogeneous- same throughout Heterogeneous- distinguishable components

  4. Separation of Mixtures • Filtering - based on size/un-dissolved solids • Distillation – based on boiling point • Chromatography – based on solubility • Centrifugation – force on sedimentation • Gaseous Diffusion – lighter gases diffuse faster • Magnetic Attraction – magnetic properties • Evaporation – dissolved solids from a liquid

  5. Properties of Matter • Physical Properties - can be observed or measured without changing the identity of the matter • Chemical Properties – the ability of a substance to change into a new substance with different properties

  6. Physical Properties Include: color, odor, texture, density, boiling point, freezing point, thermal conductivity, malleability, ductility, solubility, density. Intensive one that does not depend on the system size or the amount of material in the system Extensive one that is directly proportional to the amount of material in the system

  7. Intensive vs Extensive Examples • INTENSIVE: EXTENSIVE • Temperature Volume • Density Mass • Viscosity Size • Color • State of Matter

  8. Chemical Properties Reactivity Flammability Oxidation State – loss/gain of electrons

  9. States or Phases of Matter • Solid – definite shape and volume • Liquid – definite volume • Gas – no definite shape or volume

  10. Phase Change of Water

  11. Phase Changes • Melting – solid to liquid • Boiling – liquid to gas • Condensing – gas to a liquid • Freezing – liquid to solid • Sublimation – solid to gas without passing through liquid phase • Deposition – gas to solid without passing through liquid phase

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