1 / 13

Density

Density. Section 2.3. High population density (large population per square mile). Low population density (small population per square mile). Density in Science. Definition: Mass per unit volume Why do we need to know about density?

Download Presentation

Density

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Density Section 2.3

  2. High population density (large population per square mile) Low population density (small population per square mile)

  3. Density in Science • Definition: Mass per unit volume • Why do we need to know about density? • Density is a physical property of elements and compounds. • Density is easy to measure using a balance and a ruler (for large objects) and a graduated cylinder & water (for small objects) • Unknown elements and compounds can be identified by finding their density!

  4. Some common densities

  5. Density and Buoyancy • Water has a density of 1.0 g/mL • Any substance with a density greater than 1.0 g/mL will sink in water (all metals, for example) • Any substance with a density less than 1.0 g/mL will float in water (ice, alcohol, all gases) • Mercury has a density of 13.6 g/mL • Any substance with a density greater than 13.6 g/mL will sink in mercury (don’t try this with gold!) • Any substance with a density less than 13.6 g/mL will float in mercury, including lead!

  6. Density Formulas • Density = mass ÷ volume m D = V 1 D 1 D m V D = V V D = m D V

  7. Units of Density m g Density has units of D = mL V

  8. Sample problem • An unknown liquid filled up to the 50.1 mL mark on a graduated cylinder has a mass of 40.5 g. What is the density of the substance? What is the unknown liquid? • D = m/V • D = 40.5 g / 50.1 mL • D = 0.80838 g / mL • D = 0.808 g/mL (only 3 significant digits allowed!)

  9. Some common densities

  10. More densities • No density: vacuum (0 g/mL) • Water: 1.0 g/mL • Rocks: 2 to 7 g/mL • Copper: 8.92 g/mL • Highest density element: Osmium (22.5 g/mL) • Neutron degenerate matter: 1 x 1015 g/mL (only found in neutron stars) • Black hole: near-infinite density (5 solar masses compressed to a point in space)

  11. Group work 1. A 20.0 g sample of lead causes the water level in a graduated cylinder to rise from 50.0 mL to 51.8 mL. Calculate the density of lead. 2. A platinum ring has a mass of 40.0 g and a density of 21.1 g/mL. If placed into a graduated cylinder filled to the 42.0 mL mark with water, to what level will the water rise? • A sample of aluminum has a volume of 2.0 L and a density of 2.7 g/mL. Calculate the mass of the sample. • An unknown material has a volume of 51,000 mL and a mass of 50,000 g. What is its density? Will it float in water? • A stack of 15 nickels has a volume of 4.0 mL and a density of 5.2 g/mL.What is the mass of each nickel?

More Related