1 / 17

Chapter 1 Review

Chapter 1 Review. Megan Do & Matt Choi. The Study of Chemistry. Chemistry is the study of properties of materials and changes that they undergo. Can be applied to all aspects of life. The Atomic and Molecular Perspective of Chemistry. Matter Is the physical material of the universe.

ondrea
Download Presentation

Chapter 1 Review

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. Chapter 1 Review Megan Do & Matt Choi

  2. The Study of Chemistry • Chemistry is the study of properties of materials and changes that they undergo. • Can be applied to all aspects of life.

  3. The Atomic and Molecular Perspective of Chemistry Matter • Is the physical material of the universe. • Has mass and occupies space. Elements • Are made up of unique atoms, the building of matter. Molecules • Are combinations of atoms held together in specific shapes. • Properties relate to composition and structure present.

  4. Classifications of Matter Solids, liquids and gases are the three forms of matter called the state of matter. • Gas – no fixed volume or shape, conforms to shape of container, compressible; molecules far apart, move at high speeds, collide often • Liquid – volume independent of container, rigid, incompressible; molecules closer than gas, move rapidly but can slide over each other. • Solid – volume and shape independent of container, rigid, incompressible; molecules packed closely in definite arrangement

  5. Pure Substances/Mixtures Pure Substances • Are matter with fixed compositions and distinct proportions • Are elements or compounds Mixtures • Are a combination of two or more pure substances • Each substance retains its own identity

  6. Elements/ Compounds Elements • Are pure substances Compounds • Are combination of elements

  7. Law of Constant Proportions • A compound always consists of the same combination of elements Example • Water is always 11% H and 89% O

  8. Properties of Matter Physical properties • Measured without changing the substance. Chemical properties • Describe how substances react/change to form different substances. Intensive properties • Don’t depend on amount of substance present. Extensive properties • Depend on quantity of substance present.

  9. Physical and Chemical Changes Physical Change • Substance changes physical appearance without altering its identity. Chemical Change • Substance transforms into a chemically different substance.

  10. Separation of Mixtures Filtration • Removes solid from liquid Distillation • Boil off one or more components of the mixtures Chromatography • Exploit solubility of components

  11. Unit of Measurement • Many Properties of matter are quantitative. Mass • Is a measure of the amount of material in an object. Temperature • Measure of hotness or coldness of an object. • Celsius - water freezes at 0°C ant boils at 100°C • Kelvin – Water freezes at 273K and Boils at 373K • Zero is the lowest possible temperature. • K= °C+273K

  12. Derived SI units Volume • equals (Unit of length)ᵌ=mᵌ Density • Equals Mass divided by volume Example: g/mL or g/L

  13. Significant Figures Rules • Nonzero numbers & zeros between nonzero numbers = SIGNIFICANT • Zeros before first nonzero digit = INSIGNIFICANT • Zeros at end of number after decimal point = SIGNIFICANT • Zeros at end of number before a decimal point are ambiguous

  14. Dimensional Analysis • Method of calculation utilizing a knowledge of units

  15. Uncertainty in Measurement Precision • How well measured quantities agree with each other Accuracy • How well measured quantities agree with “true value”

  16. Review • Find the density of 4.75 L of H₂SO₄ • Are these measurements accurate or precise if the actual value is 2.7 cm? • How many atoms of hydrogen can be found in 45 g of ammonia?

More Related