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EQ: How is chemistry used to study the world around us ?

Learn about the fundamental concepts of chemistry in this chapter. Discover how atomic structure relates to an element's position on the Periodic Table of Elements. Explore the various ways chemistry is used to study our world, including research areas, chemical changes, and the classification of matter.

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EQ: How is chemistry used to study the world around us ?

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  1. Chapter 1- Matter and Change EQ: How is chemistry used to study the world around us? Students will know how the atomic structure is related to an element’s position on the Periodic Table of Elements. Bravo! – 15,000 kiloton atomic bomb!!!

  2. Introduction • Chemistry connects us to the world. • All we see, taste, & touch is matter. • Matter makes the world real. • Chemistry = study of matter: (properties, composition, how matter interacts).

  3. Chemistry involved in many interesting jobs. • Making perfumes, colognes, cosmetics. • Crime scenes (forensics). • Preparing great tasting and safe foods. • Developing life-saving drugs.

  4. Section 1-1 • Chemistry is a physical science. • Chemical = substance with a definite composition. • Ex: water is always H2O. • Everything made of chemicals.

  5. 6 Branches of Chemistry Organic Chemistry- study of carbon containing compounds. Example: C6H12O6 (Glucose) Inorganic Chemistry- study of compounds that do not contain carbon. Example: H2O Water.

  6. 6 Branches of Chemistry • Physical Chemistry- study of properties, changes, & relation of energy and matter. • Analytical chemistry- study of components & composition of materials.

  7. 6 Branches of Chemistry Biochemistry- study of living things. Ex: photosynthesis, fermentation Theoretical Chemistry- study of math & computers to design/predict new stuff.

  8. Types of Research • Basic Research-how and why things work. • Applied Research- solve specific problem. Ex: depletion of the ozone layer. • TechnologicalDevelopment- application of science to solve problems. Ex: biodegradable materials

  9. Section 1-2 • Mass: amount of matter. • Matter: anything with mass & volume Ex: air, smoke, water . • Atom: smallest unit of element. • Element: made of one kind of atom. • Periodic Table contains 118 elements. • 92 naturally occurring (found in nature) • Other 26 synthetically made.

  10. Compound: 2+ elements chemically bonded. • Physical properties: measured without altering material. Ex: MP of ice

  11. Physical Properties • Extensive Physical Properties: depend on the amount of matter. Ex: mass & length • Intensive Physical Properties- does NOT depend on amount of matter. Ex: MP, BP, FP, density, color, crystal shape

  12. Physical change - does NOT result in change in identity. Ex: cutting wire, crushing a solid, gas expanding. • Changes in state(S <-> L <-> G) Ex: melting, boiling, freezing. • Chemical Properties: undergo changes that alters identity. Ex: reactivity.

  13. Chemical change or reaction (rxn); new substance made. Ex: bread baking, nail rusting, moldy orange • Basic Chemical Formula • A + BC • A & B are called reactants •  is read “yields” = “produces” • C is the product (s)

  14. 4 states of matter • Solids: definite shape &volume. • Liquids: definite volume; no definite shape. • Gases: no definite volume; no definite shape. • Plasma: gaseous system of charged particles.

  15. Weight vs. Mass • Weight: pull of gravity on object. • Mass: quantity of matter. • Astronauts in space experience weightless since gravity changes. • Ex: 120 lb person on earth would only weigh 20 lb on moon (1/6th gravity), but would still have a mass of 120 lb.

  16. Law of conservation of mass: matter CANNOT be created nor destroyed. Ex: burning wood, nuclear reactions • Law of conservation of energy : energy CANNOT be created nor destroyed, but can be converted. Ex: Kinetic & potential energy.

  17. Classification of Matter • Mixture: 2+ kinds of matter; each retains identity & properties; can be separated physically. • 2 types of mixtures • Homogeneous (solutions); uniform composition. Ex: air, sugar in water, stainless steel. • Heterogeneous; not uniform. Ex: granite, wood, blood.

  18. Pure substances • Compound: made from atoms of 2+ elements that are chemically bonded. • Ex: water, salt, sucrose. • Cannot be separated physically. • Element: made of one pure substance that cannot be broken down. • Examples: gold, silver, hydrogen.

  19. Chapter 1 SUTW Prompt • Describe 3 ways that chemistry studies our world by listing specific areas in research, chemical changes, and the Periodic Table of Elements. • Complete an 8-10 sentence paragraph using the SUTW paragraph format. Be sure to highlight using green, yellow, and pink. • Due Date: Thursday (start of class).

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