1 / 17

Observing Physical & Chemical Changes pages 21-27 and 163-169

Observing Physical & Chemical Changes pages 21-27 and 163-169. Physical Changes. A substance may LOOK different (different size, or shape) but NO new substance is formed The composition is NOT changed! ATOMS do NOT change the way they are linked up Can (sometimes) be REVERSED.

pippa
Download Presentation

Observing Physical & Chemical Changes pages 21-27 and 163-169

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. Observing Physical &Chemical Changespages 21-27 and 163-169

  2. Physical Changes • A substance may LOOK different (different size, or shape) but NO new substance is formed • The composition is NOT changed! • ATOMS do NOT change the way they are linked up • Can (sometimes) be REVERSED

  3. SIGNS to indicate a Physical Change • Changing STATE • DISSOLVING • Changing SIZE, SHAPE, FORM

  4. Examples of Physical Changes(mark all that apply) • Drying wet clothes • Lighting a match from a matchbook • Cutting snowflakes out of paper • Melting butter for popcorn • Getting your hair colored at the salon • Dissolving sugar into iced tea

  5. Examples of Physical Changes(mark all that apply) • Drying wet clothes • Lighting a match from a matchbook • Cutting snowflakes out of paper • Melting butter for popcorn • Getting your hair colored at the salon • Dissolving sugar into iced tea

  6. Chemical Changes • A NEW substance is created with different properties because a chemical reaction took place • The composition of the substance changes! • ENERGY is always taken in or given off! • ATOMS change the way they link up • Are NOT easily REVERSED (would take another chemical change in some cases to do so)

  7. SIGNS to indicate a Chemical Change • Burning • Bubbling/fizzing, which means presence of a GAS • Formation of a PRECIPITATE • An unusual/foul ODOR can occur when a chemical change takes place • ENERGY is gained/released • Total COLOR change may occur

  8. Examples of Chemical Changes(mark all that apply) • Burning paper turns to ash • Water boiling on the stove • Curdled milk • Copper pennies turning green • Bread dough rising (gas formed as yeast reacts w/ sugar)

  9. Examples of Chemical Changes(mark all that apply) • Burning paper turns to ash • Water boiling on the stove • Curdled milk • Copper pennies turning green • Bread dough rising (gas formed as yeast reacts w/ sugar)

  10. Teacher Demo #1 Ice Ice Baby Is this a physical or chemical change? PHYSICAL Give evidence (signs) to support your answer. Melting is a change of state

  11. Teacher Demo #2 I want to be rich Is this a physical or chemical change? CHEMICAL Give evidence (signs) to support your answer. Burning

  12. Teacher Demo #3 Sugar Daddy Is this a physical or chemical change? PHYSICAL Give evidence (signs) to support your answer. Dissolving

  13. Teacher Demo #4 Alka-seltzer Is this a physical or chemical change? CHEMICAL Give evidence (signs) to support your answer. Bubbling/fizzing, presence of a gas

  14. Are the following changes Physical “P” or Chemical “C”? • _________- a pear turning brown • _________- cookie batter baking to a golden brown • _________- a frozen pond melting • _________- a marshmallow burning • _________- fireworks lighting up the sky • _________- cutting your hair • _________- eggs spoiling • _________- dissolving food coloring in water • _________- rusting of a metal bike • _________- wood burning in your fireplace • _________- frozen CO2 (dry ice) turning into a gas • _________- crushing a Coke can • _________- boiling a pot of water • _________- leaves changing color in the fall • _________- experiencing body odor (BO Charlie)

  15. Are the following changes Physical “P” or Chemical “C”? • ____C_____- a pear turning brown • ____C____- cookie batter baking to a golden brown • ____P_____- a frozen pond melting • ____C_____- a marshmallow burning • ____C_____- fireworks lighting up the sky • ____P_____- cutting your hair • ____C_____- eggs spoiling • ____P_____- dissolving food coloring in water • ____C_____- rusting of a metal bike • ____C_____- wood burning in your fireplace • ____P_____- frozen CO2 (dry ice) turning into a gas • ____P_____- crushing a Coke can • ____P_____- boiling a pot of water • ____C_____- leaves changing color in the fall • ____C_____- experiencing body odor (BO Charlie)

  16. The Law of Conservation of Mass During a chemical or physical change, matter is not created or destroyed. In 1774, this principle was 1st demonstrated byAntoine Lavoisier

  17. We Love Chemistry!

More Related