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CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER ONE. The Foundations of Chemistry. Chapter Outline. Matter and Energy States of Matter Chemical and Physical Properties Chemical and Physical Changes Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements Measurements in Chemistry Units of Measurement. Chapter Outline.

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CHAPTER ONE

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  1. CHAPTER ONE The Foundations of Chemistry

  2. Chapter Outline • Matter and Energy • States of Matter • Chemical and Physical Properties • Chemical and Physical Changes • Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements • Measurements in Chemistry • Units of Measurement

  3. Chapter Outline • Use of Numbers • The Unit Factor Method (Dimensional Analysis) • Percentage • Density and Specific Gravity • Heat and Temperature • Heat Transfer and the Measurement of Heat

  4. Matter and Energy - Vocabulary • Chemistry • Science that describes matter – its properties, the changes it undergoes, and the energy changes that accompany those processes • Matter • Anything that has mass and occupies space. • Energy • The capacity to do work or transfer heat. • Scientific (natural) law • A general statement based the observed behavior of matter to which no exceptions are known.

  5. Natural Laws • Law of Conservation of Mass • Law of Conservation of Energy • Law of Conservation of Mass-Energy • Einstein’s Relativity • E=mc2

  6. Scientific Method • Observation • Hypothesis • Observation or experiment • Theory • Observation or experiment • Law

  7. States of Matter • Solids

  8. States of Matter • Solids • Liquids

  9. States of Matter • Solids • Liquids • Gases

  10. States of Matter • Change States • heating • cooling

  11. States of Matter • Illustration of changes in state • requires energy

  12. Chemical and Physical Properties • Chemical Properties - chemical changes • rusting or oxidation • chemical reactions • Physical Properties - physical changes • changes of state • density, color, solubility • Extensive Properties - depend on quantity • Intensive Properties - do not depend on quantity

  13. Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements • Substance • matter in which all samples have identical composition and properties • Elements • substances that cannot be decomposed into simpler substances via chemical reactions • Elemental symbols • found on periodic chart

  14. Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements

  15. Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements • Compounds • substances composed of two or more elements in a definite ratio by mass • can be decomposed into the constituent elements • Water is a compound that can be decomposed into simpler substances – hydrogen and oxygen

  16. Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements

  17. Mixtures, Substances, Compounds, and Elements • Mixtures • composed of two or more substances • homogeneous mixtures • heterogeneous mixtures

  18. Measurements in Chemistry QuantityUnitSymbol • length meter m • mass kilogram kg • time second s • current ampere A • temperature Kelvin K • amt. substance mole mol

  19. Measurements in ChemistryMetric Prefixes NameSymbolMultiplier • mega M 106 • kilo k 103 • deka da 10 • deci d 10-1 • centi c 10-2

  20. Measurements in ChemistryMetric Prefixes NameSymbolMultiplier • milli m 10-3 • micro  10-6 • nano n 10-9 • pico p 10-12 • femto f 10-15

  21. Units of Measurement Definitions • Mass • measure of the quantity of matter in a body • Weight • measure of the gravitational attraction for a body

  22. Units of Measurement Common Conversion Factors • Length • 1 m = 39.37 inches • 2.54 cm = 1 inch • Volume • 1 liter = 1.06 qt • 1 qt = 0.946 liter • See Table 1-7 for more conversion factors

  23. Use of Numbers • Exact numbers • 1 dozen = 12 things for example • Accuracy • how closely measured values agree with the correct value • Precision • how closely individual measurements agree with each other

  24. Use of Numbers • Significant figures • digits believed to be correct by the person making the measurement • Measure a mile with a 6 inch ruler vs. surveying equipment • Exact numbers have an infinite number of significant figures 12.000000000000000 = 1 dozen because it is an exact number

  25. Use of Numbers Significant Figures - Rules • Leading zeroes are never significant 0.000357 has three significant figures • Trailing zeroes may be significant must specify significance by how the number is written 1300 nails - counted or weighed? • Use scientific notation to remove doubt 2.40 x 103 has ? significant figures

  26. Use of Numbers • Scientific notation for logarithms take the log of 2.40 x 103 log(2.40 x 103) = 3.380 How many significant figures? • Imbedded zeroes are always significant 3.0604 has five significant figures

  27. Use of Numbers • Piece of Black Paper – with rulers beside the edges

  28. Use of Numbers • Piece of Paper Side B – enlarged • How long is the paper to the best of your ability to measure it?

  29. Use of Numbers • Piece of Paper Side A – enlarged • How wide is the paper to the best of your ability to measure it?

  30. Use of Numbers • Determine the area of the piece of black paper using your measured values. • Compare your answer with your classmates. • Where do your answers differ in the numbers? • Significant figures rules for multiplication and division must help us determine where answers would differ.

  31. Use of Numbers • Multiplication & Division rule Easier of the two rules Product has the smallest number of significant figures of multipliers

  32. Use of Numbers • Multiplication & Division rule Easier of the two rules Product has the smallest number of significant figures of multipliers

  33. Use of Numbers • Multiplication & Division rule Easier of the two rules Product has the smallest number of significant figures of multipliers

  34. Use of Numbers • Determine the perimeter of the piece of black paper using your measured values. • Compare your answer with your classmates. • Where do your answers differ in the numbers? • Significant figures rules for addition and subtraction must help us determine where answers would differ.

  35. Use of Numbers • Addition & Subtraction rule More subtle than the multiplication rule Answer contains smallest decimal place of the addends.

  36. Use of Numbers • Addition & Subtraction rule More subtle than the multiplication rule Answer contains smallest decimal place of the addends.

  37. Use of Numbers • Addition & Subtraction rule More subtle than the multiplication rule Answer contains smallest decimal place of the addends.

  38. The Unit Factor Method • Simple but important method to get correct answers in word problems. • Method to change from one set of units to another. • Visual illustration of the idea.

  39. The Unit Factor Method • Change from a to a by obeying the following rules.

  40. The Unit Factor Method • Change from a to a by obeying the following rules. • Must use colored fractions.

  41. The Unit Factor Method • Change from a to a by obeying the following rules. • Must use colored fractions. • The box on top of the fraction must be the same color as the next fraction’s bottom box.

  42. The Unit Factor Method R • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  43. The Unit Factor Method O R R • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  44. The Unit Factor Method O B R R O • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  45. The Unit Factor Method O B B R B R O B • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  46. The Unit Factor Method O B B R B R O B • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  47. The Unit Factor Method O B B R B R O B • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  48. The Unit Factor Method O B B R B R O B • Fractions to choose from R O B O B B O R O B B B

  49. The Unit Factor Method • colored fractions represent unit factors 1 ft = 12 in becomes or • Example 1-1: Express 9.32 yards in millimeters.

  50. The Unit Factor Method

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