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What’s The Matter?

What’s The Matter?. The Basics. Matter is something that has mass and exists in a solid, liquid, gas or plasma state Matter is measured by mass in grams. More Basics. The smallest unit of matter is an atom Example: one oxygen atom One or more atoms of the SAME type is called an element

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What’s The Matter?

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  1. What’s The Matter?

  2. The Basics • Matter is something that has mass and exists in a solid, liquid, gas or plasma state • Matter is measured by mass in grams

  3. More Basics • The smallest unit of matter is an atom • Example: one oxygen atom • One or more atoms of the SAME type is called an element • Example: The oxygen we breathe is O2, which is two atoms of oxygen together

  4. More Basics • When multiple atoms are combined chemical a molecule is created • Example: A water molecule is made of two hydrogen and one oxygen atoms

  5. More Basics • When many molecules of the SAME kind are put together a compound is created • Example: a glass if purified water or table salt

  6. Compare and Contrast • Element and Compound • Both are made up of atoms • Both contain only one type of something • Elements only have one type of ATOM; Compounds have one type of MOLECULE • Elements contain molecules, the element oxygen contains O2 molecules

  7. Energy and States of Matter • A solid is the state of matter with the lowest energy • Molecules are in a fixed position with respect to one another; they do not move

  8. Energy and States of Matter • When energy (heat) is added to a solid, what happens? • The solid melts to a liquid • Liquid- molecules move within a fixed volume and variable shape • Think about what happens when an ice cube melts

  9. Energy and States of Matter • What happens when you add energy (heat) to a liquid? • The liquid evaporates into a gas • Gas- molecules move around rapidly and do not stay close together. The rapid moving is due to their high energy level • The temperature at which a liquid starts becoming a gas is called the boiling point

  10. Energy and State of Matter • Energy can be removed by reducing heat. When energy is removed: • Gas condenses to liquid • Liquid freezes to a solid • All substances have a boiling point, freezing point, condensing point, and melting point

  11. Skipping Liquids • Sublimation: Solid goes to gas • Example: Dry Ice • Deposition/Resublimation: Solid to gas

  12. Put it all together • Fill in the boxes and arrows liquid

  13. Physical vs. Chemical Properties • Physical property: characteristic of a substance that can change without changing the actual substance • List as many examples of a physical properties of substances • Density, color, odor, volume, state change

  14. Physical vs. Chemical Properties • Chemical property: the properties of a material that can only be observed during a chemical reaction • List examples of chemical properties of substances • Reactivity, ability to form new substances

  15. Physical vs. Chemical Changes • Physical changes • Don’t change the chemical properties of composition of a substance • Example: State changes - the molecules are the same, just a different distance apart

  16. Physical vs. Chemical Changes • Chemical changes • Change the chemical properties • Actual molecules in the new substance are different from what you started with • Example: Baking a cake- the properties of the ingredients in the cake a different once they are assembled

  17. Physical Properties:Intensive vs. Extensive • Intensive: Doesn’t vary with quantity • Color, odor, density • Example: Salt- white and tastes the same regardless of quantity • Extensive: Varies with quantity • Mass, volume, stiffness • Example: Salt- the mass of salt changes based on the quantity

  18. Mix it Up • Mixture – has variable composition, different types of parts • Example: air, water from the tap, hot chocolate, paint, 14k gold, stainless steel (metal mixtures are called alloys) • Heterogenous “hetero” means different • Homogenous “homo” means same • Solution = homogenous mixture

  19. Mix it Up • The solvent is the substance that the solute dissolves in • If I stir sugar into coffee, which is which? • Coffee- solvent, sugar- solute • If all the sugar dissolves in the coffee, what is the coffee called? • A homogenous mixture or solution • If all the sugar doesn’t dissolve what is it called? • A heterogeneous mixture

  20. Classifying Matter • Pure substance: any pure element or compound, in any phase of matter • Which of the following is a pure substance? • Table Salt • Maple syrup • Carbon dioxide • Salad dressing

  21. Separating Mixtures • How do you separate a liquid from a solid? • Filtration: separation for a solid a liquid through a filter that the solid cannot pass through • How do we separate two mixed liquids? • Distillation: a separation process that depends on the different boiling points of the two substances

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