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Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a...

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Matter All matter has Mass and Volume . Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.
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Page 1: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Matter

All matter has Mass and Volume.

Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Page 2: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Element

• A substance that cannot be broken down

into simpler substances by

chemical means.

Page 3: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Atoms

• Each element is made of one kind of atom.

• Atoms are the smallest unit of an element

that maintains the chemical properties of

that element.

Page 4: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Symbols

• Short hand way of writing element names.

• First letter capital. All others are lower case.

• One, two or three letters.

• Print like in kindergarten.

Page 5: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Elements of the Human BodyIn order of amounts

• Oxygen about 66% of body.

• Carbon about 18%.

• Hydrogen about 10%.

• Potassium, calcium, sulfur,nitrogen, phosphorus, sodium 2% or less.

Page 6: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Molecule

• Smallest unit of substance that behaves like the substance.

• Examples H2O, O2

Page 7: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Compounds

• Substance made up of atoms of different elements.

• Each molecule of a compound contains 2 or more elements that are chemically combined.

• They combine in the same proportions.

• Example- NaCl, KOH

Page 8: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Compounds

• Have unique properties

• Have properties unlike elements that combine to make the compound.

Page 9: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Chemical Formula

• Shows how many atoms of each element make up the compound

• The number of atoms is written as a subscript after the element’s symbol.

• If only one atom, then no subscript.• NO, NO ones.• Numbers in front of compound show

molecules.• Example 3H2O

Page 10: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Pure Substances

• Pure substance- matter that has a fixed composition.

• Elements and compounds are pure substances.

• Pure substances can not be separated into parts.

• They are chemically combined and can not be physically separated.

Page 11: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Mixtures

• Combination of substances that are not chemically combined

• Can be separated into their parts

• Classified by how well they mix

Page 12: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Types of Mixtures

Homogeneous Mixture

Heterogeneous Mixture

Page 13: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Homogeneous Mixture

• Components are evenly distributed• Mixture is the same throughout• Can also be called a solution.• Example- gasoline-100 liquids• Gasoline is misicible.• Miscible- able to be mixed.• Immiscible-will not mix• Example- oil and water

Page 14: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Heterogeneous Mixture

• Substances not evenly distributed

• Some are hard to recognize.

• Ex. Shirt- cotton and polyester

• salad

Page 15: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Miscible and Immiscible

• Gasoline is miscible.• Miscible- able to be mixed.• Immiscible-will not mix• Example- oil and water• Gases can mix with liquids.• Gas-liquid mixture- carbonated drinks gas in drink and air bubbles foam egg whites

Page 16: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Properties of Matter

• Physical properties

• Chemical properties

Page 17: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Physical Properties• Characterists that can be observed without changing the identity of

the substance• Can help identify substances state, color• Can be observed and measured boiling point- the temp at which a liquid changes to a gas melting point-the temp at which a solid changes to a liquid • Help determine uses-antifreeze, aluminum foil • Example-strength, hardness, magnetism, ability to conduct heat or electricity, density

Page 18: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Density

• D=m/v

• Measure of how much matter is contained in a certain volume of a substance

• Units- example- g/cm3, g/ml, cg/ml

• Water has a density of 1g/cm3

• A cubic centimeter has the same volume as a milliliter.

Page 19: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Density, Mass, Weight

• Density is different from Mass.

• Mass and weight are different.

• D= mass/volume

• Mass- amount of substance

• Weight- pull of gravity on a substance.

Page 20: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Chemical Properties

• Describes how a substance changes into a new substance, by

1. combining with other elements 2. breaking apart into new substancesExample- 1. Flammability – ability to burn 2. Nonflammability-does not burn 3. Reactivity- capacity of a substance to combine with another substance( iron + O = rust)

Page 21: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Chemical and Physical Properties

• Are not alike

• Can observe physical properties without changing the identity of the substance

• Can observe chemical properties only in situations in which the identity of the substance changes

Page 22: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Changes in Matter

• Physical Change-affects 1 or more physical properties of a substance without changing the identity of the substance

• Example- cutting hair, melting popsicle, crushing a can, sugar dissolving

• Do not change identity of substance• During physical change-energy is

absorbed or released, arrangement of atoms is the same even if looks different

Page 23: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Chemical Changes

• Chemical change- happens when one or more substances are changed into entirely new substances that have different properties.

• Examples- food digested, battery dies, oxygen breathed, fruit ripening

Page 24: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Chemical Changes

• Form new substances• Interaction – the action or influence between things• Can be detected- change in color, odor, fizzing, foaming, sound, heat, light

Chemical changes can not be reversed by physical changes.(bread baking, rust, milk turning sour)

Page 25: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Breaking Down Mixtures

Mixtures can be separated by physical changes.

Mixtures are not chemically combined.

Breakdown by removing pieces, heat, distillation, centrifuge, evaporation

Page 26: Matter All matter has Mass and Volume. Every sample of matter is either an element, a compound, or a mixture.

Breaking Down Compounds

• Breakdown through chemical changes

heat, electric current, chemical changes


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