1 / 51

Properties of Matter

Properties of Matter.

barto
Download Presentation

Properties of Matter

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. Properties of Matter

  2. Essential QuestionsHow does the state of matter define its properties?What are the real-life examples of molecules, atoms & ions?How are atoms, molecules & ions alike and how are they different?How can matter be classified?What are the essential components of solutions?Why is water the universal solvent?In what ways can matter be quantified?What units should be used to quantify matter?What are the chemical & physical properties of pure substances?How can chemical and physical changes be determined in a laboratory setting?

  3. The Breakdown of Matter EQ: How can matter be classified?

  4. Heterogeneous Mixtures • Hetero = different • Geneous = origin or beginning • has separations and/or boundaries • can see to different parts • Are ALL mixtures

  5. Heterogeneous Mixtures

  6. HomogeneousMixtures • Homeo = same • Geneous = origin or beginning • matter of the SAME make-up • (no boundaries)

  7. Homogeneous Mixtures

  8. Homogeneous Mixtures

  9. SolutionsEQ: What are the essential components of solutions? • Homogeneous mixtures • Physically NOT chemical combined • Solute = the substance BEING dissolved • Solvent = the substance DOING the dissolving

  10. Examples of Solutions • Alloys = solid mixture or solution (brass, 14K gold, steel) • Air = gas mixture or solution • Liquid solutions = sweet tea, coffee, milk, tap water EQ: Why is water the universal solvent?

  11. Solution Properties • Soluble = the solute is able to dissolve in the solvent • Insoluble = the solute is NOT able to dissolve in the solvent

  12. Descriptions of a Solution • Diluted Solutions = small amount of solute and/or a large amount of solvent • Concentrated Solutions = large amount of solute and/or a small amount of solvent • Saturated Solution = a solution that will NOT dissolve any more solute

  13. An increase in temperature will allow more solute to dissolve in a solvent. The molecules of the solvent move faster and further apart allowing more room for more solute molecules.

  14. Name three properties of solutions: 1. __________________________________ 2. __________________________________ 3. __________________________________ 3 Name two types of mixtures & two types of pure substances. 1. ____________________________________ 2. ____________________________________ 2 1 What is the one key in distinguishing between homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures 1. _____________________________________

  15. Pure Substances

  16. Pure Substances • chemically pure substances • only one part or one kind of matter • Elements = found on the periodic table • Compounds = 2 or more elements that have combined CHEMICALLY EQ: How are atoms, molecules & ions alike and how are they different?

  17. ElementsEQ: What are the real-life examples of molecules, atoms & ions? • 90 natural occurring elements • found on the periodic table • Atoms = smallest part of an element • represented by symbols

  18. Compounds • 2 or more elements that have combined CHEMICALLY • Molecules = smallest part of a compound • represented by formulas

  19. Elements & Compounds

  20. States of Matter • Also called Phases of Matter • Solids • Liquids • Vapors (gases)

  21. Solids • Have a definite shape • Have a definite volume • Particles VIBRATE in place

  22. Liquids • Have NO definite shape • Have definite volume • particles SLIDE freely

  23. Gases (vapor) • Have NO definite shape • Have NO definite volume • particles fill the volume of the container

  24. Solids, Liquids & Gases • Solids = can form crystals = solid where the particle are arranged into repeating patterns. • Liquids = physical property of Viscosity = “thickness” – the resistance to flow. • Gases = volume of gases depend greatly on pressure and temperature. EQ: How does the state of matter define its properties?

  25. Phase Changes • Melting • Freezing • Vaporization • Condensation • Sublimation • physical changes

  26. Melting • the process of changing from a solid to a liquid • energy is being put into the substance • melting point = the temperature at which melting occurs – physical property • the melting point of water is 0ºC

  27. Freezing • the process of changing from a liquid to a solid • energy is being pulled out of the substance • freezing point =same temperature as the melting point • (used mainly in weather)

  28. Vaporization • the process of changing from a liquid to a gas • energy in being put into the substance • evaporation • boiling

  29. Evaporation • vaporization that occurs at the surface of the liquid

  30. Boiling • vaporization that occurs throughout the liquid • boiling point= the temperature at which boiling occurs • the boiling point of water is 100ºC

  31. Condensation • the process of changing from a gas to a liquid • energy is being pulled out of the substance

  32. Sublimation • the process of changing from a solid to a gas • energy is being put into the substance • ex: dry ice (CO2)

  33. Name three phases of matter: 1. __________________________________ 2. __________________________________ 3. __________________________________ 3 Name two types of vaporization. 1. ____________________________________ 2. ____________________________________ 2 1 What is the so different about sublimation? 1. _____________________________________

  34. Properties of Matter • characteristics that can identify and describe matter. • Physical Properties • Chemical Properties EQ: What are the chemical & physical properties of pure substances?

  35. Physical Properties • observable properties • physical change = changes that occur while the substance remains the same. • ex: phase change

  36. Examples of Physical Properties • density (d=m/v) • color • melting point & boiling point • hardness • phase of matter • malleable • ductile • taste • conductivity • luster • texture • solubility

  37. Chemical Properties • properties that describes how the substance interacts with other substances or will act chemically • chemical change = an actual chemical reaction takes place and a NEW substance is formed • ex: combustion

  38. Examples of Chemical Properties • flammability • reactivity • combustion • oxidation • reacts with _____ • endothermic • exothermic • forms a precipitate

  39. Chemical ChangeEQ: How can chemical and physical changes be determined in a laboratory setting? • Color change • Temperature change = reaction is either endothermic or exothermic • Gas given off • Precipitate formed = solid formed in the reaction of two liquids

  40. Energy (temperature) Changes in Reactions • Endothermic reactions • Energy is put into the reaction • Reaction stops as soon as energy is no longer put into the reaction • Ex: cooking • Exothermic reactions • Energy is given off in the reactions • Ex: burning

  41. Exothermic Reactions • May require energy to be put into to the reaction in order to start or activate the reaction • Activation Energy = energy required to start an exothermic reaction

  42. Reducing Activation Energy • Catalysts are often used to reduce the activation energy required to start an exothermic reaction

  43. Chemical change vs. Physical change • ask the question, “Has a new substance been formed?” • “yes” = chemical change • “no” = physical change

  44. Examples of Problems • ex: 2H2 + O2 2H2O • hydrogen gas combines with oxygen gas to form water • a new substance is formed • a chemical reaction occurs EQ: How can chemical and physical changes be determined in a laboratory setting?

  45. Examples of Problems • : N2 + O2 + CO2 = air • nitrogen gas combines with oxygen gas and carbon dioxide gas and a few other gases mix • NO chemical reaction takes place • physical change has taken place in the gases

  46. Examples of Problems • Ice melting • Phases change • Solid  Liquid • No new substance is formed…it is still water • Physical change

  47. Malleable • A physical property that describes being able to be flatten or pounded onto sheets • This property is associated with metals.

  48. Ductile • A physical property that describes being able to be drawn into a wire. • This property is associated with metals.

  49. Luster • A physical property that describes how a substance reflects light • This property is often associated with minerals, gem stones, metals and nonmetals.

  50. Oxidation • A chemical property describing a substance reaction with oxygen • slow oxidation = rusting, tarnish, corrosion • fast oxidation = burning, exploding, combustion

More Related