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Matter and Change Chemistry

Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

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Some Criteria for the Classification of Matter Properties State (solid, liquid, gas) Composition

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Page 1: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Matter and Change

Chemistry

Page 2: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

A) Classification of Matter

Page 3: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Some Criteria for the Classification of Matter

Properties

State (solid, liquid, gas)

Composition

Page 4: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Properties

Intensive -Do not depend

on amount of matter.

Extensive -Depend on

amount of matter.

Page 5: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Intensive and Extensive Properties

Sulfur

Page 6: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

PropertiesPhysical: observed without

without changing the composition of the substance.

Chemical: the ability of a substance to undergo a specific chemical change

Page 7: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Examples of Physical Properties

Color, odor, hardness, density, melting point, boiling point, state, solubility.

Page 8: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Substance State Color Melting Point (C°)

Boiling Point (C°)

Density (g/cm3)

Oxygen O2 Gas Colorless -218 -183 0.0014

Mercury Hg Liquid Silvery-white

-39 357 13.5

Bromine Br2 Liquid Red-brown -7 59 3.12

Water H2O Liquid Colorless 0 100 1.00

Sodium Chloride

NaCl Solid White 801 1413 2.17

Example: Physical Properties

Page 9: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

States of MatterSolid

fixed shape and volume, incompressible

Liquid fixed volume, takes the shape of

its containerGas

takes the volume and shape of its container

Page 10: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter
Page 11: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Solid Liquid Gas

http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/atoms/states.html

Page 12: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Bromine

Gas (Vapor)

Liquid

Page 13: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Change of PhaseMelting solid liquidCondensation gas liquid

Freezing liquid solid

Evaporation liquid gasSublimation solid gas

Boiling: Evaporation occurring beneath the liquid’s surface.

Page 14: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Is changing phase a physical or chemical change?

Page 15: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Classification of Matter(by composition)

Page 16: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

(Pure) SubstanceMatter that has a uniform and

definite composition.

Elements

Compounds

Page 17: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Mixture: a physical blend of two or more substances that are not chemically combined.

Homogeneous

Heterogeneous

Page 18: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

B) Mixtures

Page 19: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

MixtureA physical blend of two or more

substances.

Page 20: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

MixturesHomogeneous

Heterogeneous

Page 21: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Homogeneous mixture (solution)

Uniform composition throughout. One phase.

Page 22: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Phase of a Mixture

A part of a mixture with uniform properties and composition.

Page 23: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Copper II Sulfate and its solution in water.

Page 24: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Example: Stainless Steel

A homogeneous mixture of: -Iron (Fe) -Chromium (Cr)-Nickel (Ni)

Page 25: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Example: Gaseous Mixture

Elements argon and nitrogen and a compound (water vapor).

Page 26: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Heterogeneous Mixtures

Non-uniform composition throughout the mixture

Two or more phases.

Example:

Oil and vinegar

Page 27: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Note:

Mixtures can be physically separated.

Mixtures exhibit physical properties similar to the components of the mixture.

Page 28: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Separation Methods

Use differences in the physical properties of the components of the mixture.

Page 29: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Example: Separate iron filings from sulfur using a magnet.

Page 30: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Filtration: separates a solid from a liquid in a heterogeneous mixture

Page 31: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Distillation: -separate dissolved solids from a liquid -uses boiling and condensation.

Page 32: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Distillation of Crude Oil (Refining)

Crude Oil is a mixture of Hydrocarbons

Page 33: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Distillation of Crude Oil

Page 34: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

c) Elements and Compounds

Page 35: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

ElementsThe simplest substances.Can not be separated into simpler

substances.Building blocks of all matter. More than 100 known elements.Represented by chemical symbols.

Page 36: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Chemical Symbols of ElementsSystem started by Jons Berzelius

(Sweden, 1779-1848) One or two first letters of name of

the element.Many elements names have roots

from: Latin, Greek, mythology, geography, names of scientists.

Page 37: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Examples: Americium, Am

Einsteinium, Es

Bromine, Br

Helium, He

Lead(Plumbum), Pb

Niobium, Nb

Iron (Ferrum), Fe

Mendelevium, Md

Page 38: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

CompoundA substance that contains two or more

elements chemically combined.

Compounds have different properties from the individual substances.

(Ex: H2O)

Page 39: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Example: H2O

Page 40: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Substance or mixture?

If composition is fixed and may not changesubstance

Page 41: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter
Page 42: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

d) Chemical Properties and Chemical Changes

Page 43: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

H2O composition is fixed- compound

Gaseous Phase Liquid Phase

Page 44: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Chemical PropertiesThe ability of a substance to

transform into a new substance (to undergo a chemical change).

Example: Magnesium reacts with oxygen to form magnesium oxide.

Page 45: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Magnesium Mg

Page 46: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Burning of Magnesium2Mg+ O2 2MgO

Page 47: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Physical ChangesPhysical change: a change in the

physical properties of a substance.

Composition does not change.

May be reversible or irreversible.Examples:

Reversible:Irreversible:

Page 48: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Chemical ChangeA change that produces matter with a

different composition than the original matter.

Atoms rearrange themselves into new combinations.

Page 49: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Burning of MethaneCH4 +2O2 CO2 + 2H2O

Page 50: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Burning of MethaneCH4 + 2O2 CO2 + 2H2O

Page 51: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Recognizing a Chemical Change

energy exchange production of a gascolor changeformation of a precipitate

Page 52: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

Formation of a Precipitate

Cu(OH)2

Precipitate

Page 53: Matter and Change Chemistry. A) Classification of Matter

The Law of Conservation of Mass (Antoine Lavoisier)

In any chemical or physical change, mass is neither created or destroyed

Mass is CONSTANT