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Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

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Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures. Matter Exploration Unit. What is an element?. consists of only one kind of atom cannot be broken down into a simpler type of matter by either physical or chemical means - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures Matter Exploration Unit
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Page 1: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and

MixturesMatter Exploration Unit

Page 2: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

What is an element?

• consists of only one kind of atom

• cannot be broken down into a simpler type of matter by either physical or chemical means

• can exist as one atom of the element by itself ( 1 atom of Nitrogen) or together (2 atoms of Nitrogen)

Page 3: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Elements and Elements as Molecules

The element Argon The element Nitrogen as a molecule in the gas phase.

Page 4: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

What is a molecule?

• A molecule is 2 or more atoms put together (bound together).

• May be made of the same or different atoms.

• Difficult to separate.

Page 5: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Compounds

• consists of atoms of two or more different elements bound together

• can be broken down into a simpler type of matter (elements) by chemical means (but not by physical means)

• has properties that are different from its component elements

Page 6: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

This is the a molecule of the compound water (gas phase). Oxygen atoms are red and Hydrogen atoms are white. What do you call the individual oxygen and hydrogen atoms?

Page 7: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Mixtures

• consists of two or more different elements and/or compounds physically intermingled

• can be separated into its components by physical means (sorting, sifting, using a magnet, changing density. Ex: From the video last week, how did they separate iron filings from sand?)

Page 8: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Microscopic view of a gaseous mixture containing two elements (argon and nitrogen) and a compound (water).

Page 9: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Element, Molecule, Compound, and/or Mixture?How can the example be both an element and a molecule?

Page 10: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Check your answers:

• A. 2 Molecules of an element (4 atoms)

• B. 2 Molecules of a compound (6 atoms)

• C. Mixture of 2 Molecules of 2 different elements

• D. 2 Molecules of 2 compounds

• E. 2 Molecules of an element

• F. Mixture of 2 Molecules: 1 compound and 1 element

• WHY are examples C and F mixtures and not all compounds?

Page 11: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Definition

Example

Picture

Element

Molecule

Compound

Mixture

Page 12: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and/or Mixtures?

• How can an example be both a compound and a molecule?

Page 13: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Friday’s Activity

•How can we model elements, mixtures, compounds, and molecules? What are some materials we could use?

•Why do we need models?

Page 14: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Mini Marshmallow Lab

• If you are given the following materials, how could you model elements, compounds, mixtures, and molecules? What would each material represent?

• Mini Marshmallows of different colors

(white, green, orange, pink, yellow)

• Toothpicks

Page 15: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures
Page 16: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Construction

• Step 1: CONSTRUCT 7 models of either elements, compounds, or mixtures with the materials (mini marshmallows, toothpicks, plastic bags, markers).

• Step 2: DRAW a ROUGH sketch of EACH model in your journals (use a legend and color code your models) after your build EACH model. You will reuse some atoms.

• Step 3: Answer analysis questions in your journal.

• Step 4: Clean up or store materials.

Page 17: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Lab Rules

• 1. Wait for teacher instruction before touching lab materials. ALWAYS!

• 2. No horseplay! (Do not eat or throw the materials)

• 3. Clear your desk and make room for only the materials you need.

• 4. If in groups, share responsibilities of task. No putdowns, either.

• 5. When finished, return materials to their correct place.

Page 18: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Consequences• Immediately removed from your group and assigned to

write a 2 page paper on how molecules affect your daily life.

• Participation points will be taken away.

Page 19: Elements, Molecules, Compounds, and Mixtures

Exit Slip

• Answer in your journal:

1. What are we doing for the Lab activity in Friday’s class?

2. What are the main Lab rules?

3. What are the consequences of not following the Lab or classroom rules?

4. What cooperative learning skills are important for this activity?


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