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Nature of Matter

Nature of Matter

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Nature of Matter. Matter. Anything that takes up space Has mass You are made up of matter…and so is everything around you . Looking more closely at matter…. Atoms : basic building blocks of matter Atoms are made up of Subatomic particles : PROTONS NEUTRONS ELECTRONS. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nature of Matter

Nature of Matter

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Matter

• Anything that takes up space• Has mass• You are made up of matter…and so is

everything around you

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Looking more closely at matter…

• Atoms: basic building blocks of matter

• Atoms are made up of Subatomic particles:

PROTONSNEUTRONSELECTRONS

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Subatomic particles

• Proton: +, nucleus• Neutrons: neutral,

nucleus• Electrons: negative,

cloud around nucleus; organization inside cloud – into shells

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Atomic Rules

• The number of protons and electrons are usually equal in an atom

• So the positives and negatives balance out…• So the overall charge of an atom is:

0

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Elements

• Pure substance• Made up of only one type of atom

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WHICH ELEMENTS ARE THE MOST COMMON IN LIVING THINGS?

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To answer that question…

• We have to look at the substances that make up you.

• More often than not, elements do not exist in their solitary state.

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WHICH ELEMENTS ARE THE MOST COMMON IN LIVING THINGS?

Sooo……

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Key elements for living things

• CARBON (C)• HYDROGEN (H)• OXYGEN (O)• PHOSPHORUS (P)• NITROGEN (N)• SULFUR (S)

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Atomic Number

• Number of protons in an atom– Carbon’s atomic number = 6– So carbon has 6 protons

• And by default…since atoms are neutral, we can say:– Atomic number is also equal to the number of

electrons

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PRACTICE!

• Neon = atomic number is 10– # protons?– # electrons?

• CHLORINE = atomic number is 17– # protons?– # electrons?

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Side Note

• If we change the atomic number, we change the element we are talking about…

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Ions

• An atom that has gained or lost electrons– If an atom gains electrons…it’s charge is– If an atom loses electrons…it’s charge is

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How are ions important to you?

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What about the neutrons?

• Atomic Mass: sum of the protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom

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So…

• To figure out the number of neutrons in an atom…you have to:

Atomic mass – atomic number = # of neutrons

Practice: carbon’s atomic number is 6, mass is 12

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More practice

• Chlorine: atomic number = 17atomic mass = 35

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Isotopes

• Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons

• Isotopes: atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons

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How are isotopes important to you?

• Can be used as “chemical tracers” to help locate certain substances at the cellular level

• Radioactive isotopes:– Dating– Study biological processes– Treatments– Exposure

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Compounds

• Substance formed by the chemical combination of two or more elements in definite proportions

• Example: WATER!

• Water is NOT an element! Made up of 2 elements!!