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Table of Contents

This chapter explores the fundamental concepts of matter, its properties, and the changes it undergoes. Topics covered include volume, mass, elements, compounds, molecules, physical and chemical properties, changes in matter, energy, and classification of matter.

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Table of Contents

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  1. Matter and Change Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1Chemistry Is a Physical Science Section 2Matter and Its Properties Section 3Elements

  2. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Matter • Volume is the amount of three dimensional space an object occupies. • Mass is a measure of the amount of matter. • Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space.

  3. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Basic Building Blocks of Matter • An atom is the smallest unit of an element that maintains the chemical identity of that element. • An element is a pure substance that cannot be broken down into simpler, stable substances and is made of one type of atom.

  4. A compound is a substance that can be broken down into simple stable substances. Each compound is made from the atoms of two or more elements that are chemically bonded. • A molecule is the smallest unit of a diatomic/polyatomic element or covalent compound that retains all of the properties of that element or compound.

  5. Visual Concepts Chapter 1 Molecule

  6. Properties of Matter • Every substance has characteristic properties. • Properties can be used by chemist to distinguish between substances and to separate them. • A property may be a characteristic that defines an entire set of substances, and can, therefore, be used to identify unknown substances. For example, many elements are metals. All metals are good conductors of electricity, a property of metals. If an unknown element is tested and found to conduct electricity well, it is a metal.

  7. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Properties and Changes in Matter • Extensive properties depend on the amount of matter that is present. • volume • mass • the amount of energy in a substance.

  8. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Properties and Changes in Matter • Intensive properties do not depend on the amount of matter present. • melting point • boiling point • density • ability to conduct electricity • ability to transfer energy as heat

  9. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Properties of Matter

  10. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Physical Properties and Physical Changes • A physical property is a characteristic that can be observed or measured without changing the identity of the substance. • melting point and boiling point • A physical change is a change in a substance that does not involve a change in the identity of the substance. • grinding, cutting, melting, and boiling

  11. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Physical Properties and Physical Changes, continued • A change of state is a physical change of a substance from one state to another. • states of matter—solid state, liquid state, gas state, plasma • In the solid state, matter has definite volume and definite shape. • In theliquid state, matter has a definite volume but an indefinite shape.

  12. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Physical Properties and Physical Changes, continued • In the gas state,matter has neither definite volume nor definite shape. • Plasmais a high-temperature physical state of matter in which atoms lose most of their electrons, particles that make up atoms.

  13. Visual Concepts Chapter 1 Plasma

  14. Chapter 1 Water in Three States

  15. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Chemical Properties and Chemical Changes • A chemical propertyrelates to a substance’s ability to undergo changes that transform it into different substances • A change in which one or more substances are converted into different substances is called a chemical change orchemical reaction.

  16. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Chemical Properties and Chemical Changes, continued • Thereactants are the substances that react in a chemical change. • Theproducts are the substances that are formed by the chemical change. • Carbon plus oxygen yields (or forms) carbon dioxide. reactants product carbon + oxygen carbon dioxide

  17. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Evidence of a Chemical Change

  18. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Electrolysis of Water

  19. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Comparison of Physical and Chemical Properties

  20. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Energy and Changes in Matter • Energy is always involved when physical or chemical changes occur. • Energy can be in various forms. • heat • light • Energy can be absorbed or released in a change, it is not destroyed or created. • law of conservation of energy

  21. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Classification of Matter

  22. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Classifying Matter

  23. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Classification of Matter • Amixtureis a blend of two or more kinds of matter, each of which retains its own identity and properties. • mixed together physically • can usually be separated by physical means • variable composition • Homogeneousmixtures are calledsolutions • uniform in in its properties throughout (salt-water solution) • Heterogeneousmixtures • not uniform throughout (clay-water mixture)

  24. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Types of Mixtures

  25. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Pure Substances • Apure substancehas a fixed composition. • Pure substances are either compounds or elements. • A pure substance differs from a mixture in the following ways: • Every sample of a given pure substance has exactly the same characteristic properties. • Every sample of a given pure substance has exactly the same composition. • ex. Water is always 11.2% hydrogen and 88.8% oxygen by mass.

  26. Section2 Matter and Its Properties Chapter 1 Examples of Mixtures

  27. Law of Conservation of Mass • The law of conservation of mass says that the total mass remains constant during a chemical reaction. • total mass of reactants = total mass of products • Ex. carbon + oxygen  carbon dioxide 12 g + 32 g = 44 g

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