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Properties of Matter

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Title: Properties of Matter


1
Properties of Matter
2
Substances
  • A substance is matter that is uniform and
    unchanging.
  • Examples salt, pure water, Dr. Pepper

3
Physical Properties of Matter
  • A physical property is a characteristic that can
    be observed or measured without changing the
    object.
  • Examples density, color, shape, size, odor,
    hardness, melting point, boiling point

4
Extensive and Intrinsic Properties
  • Extensive properties are dependent upon the
    amount of substance present.
  • Example mass
  • Intensive properties are independent of the
    amount of matter present.
  • Example density or color

5
Extrinsic (A) or Intrinsic (B)?
A. Extrinsic
  • Volume
  • Length
  • Smell
  • Texture

A. Extrinsic
B. Intrinsic
B. Intrinsic
6
Chemical Property
  • A chemical property is how it changes or combines
    with other substances.
  • Example iron forming rust

7
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8
  • All matter takes up space and has mass, yet
    matter can exist in different states.
  • There are three main states of matter
  • 1. Solid
  • 2. Liquid
  • 3. Gas

9
Energy
E ENERGY
10
Solids
  • Every solid has a definite volume and a definite
    shape.

11
Liquids
  • A liquid flows and takes the shape of its
    container.
  • Liquid matter has a definite volume but no
    definite shape.

12
Gases
  • Gases expand or contract to fill the space
    available to them. They can also compress to
    fill smaller spaces.
  • A gas has neither a definite shape or a definite
    volume.

13
A Solid B Gas C Liquid D Plasma E -
Energy
  • 1. State of matter found in stars
  • 2. State of matter with a fixed volume, but no
    fixed shape.
  • 3. State of matter with no fixed volume or shape.
  • 4. State of matter with a fixed volume and shape

D
C
B
A
14
Changes in Matter
15
Physical Changes
  • Physical changes are about energy and states of
    matter.
  • When you step on a can and crush it, you have
    forced a physical change. The shape of the object
    has changed. It wasn't a change in the state of
    matter, but something changed.

16
Chemical Changes
  • A chemical change involves one or more substances
    changing into a new substance.
  • When iron (Fe) rusts you can see it happen. The
    actual molecules have changed their structure
    (the iron oxidized).

17
Conservation of Mass
  • The Law of Conservation of Mass says that mass
    can neither be created nor destroyed.
  • Massreactants Massproducts

18
Mixtures of Matter
19
Matter is divided into 2 categories
  • Pure Substances
  • Mixtures

20
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21
Pure Substances
  • Element
  • composed of identical atoms
  • EX copper wire, aluminum foil

22
Pure Substances
  • Compound
  • composed of 2 or more elements in a fixed ratio
  • properties differ from those of individual
    elements
  • EX table salt (NaCl)

23
Mixture
  • A mixture is a combination of two or more pure
    substances - each retaining its own specific
    properties.
  • The components of a mixture can be separated by
    physical means, i.e. without the making and
    breaking of chemical bonds.
  • Examples Air, table salt thoroughly dissolved in
    water, milk, wood, and concrete.

24
There are two types of mixtures
  • Heterogeneous- mixture is not the same from place
    to place.
  • Chocolate chip cookie, gravel, soil.
  • Homogeneous- same composition throughout.
  • Kool-aid, air, brass.

25
P r o p e r t i e s o f M i x t u r e s
  • E a c h s u b s t a n c e r e t a i n s
    i t s o w n p r o p e r t i e s .
  • S u b s t a n c e s c a n b e
    p r e s e n t i n a n y a m o u n t .
  • S u b s t a n c e s c a n b e
    s e p a r a t e d b y s i m p l e
    p h y s i c a l m e a n s.

26
Homogeneous Mixtures
  • Mixture in which the properties and composition
    are uniform throughout the sample. Such mixtures
    are termed solutions.Examples Air and table
    salt thoroughly dissolved in water.

27
Heterogeneous Mixtures
  • Mixture in which the properties and composition
    are not uniform throughout the sample.Examples
    Milk, wood, and concrete.

28
Alloy
  • Alloys are basically a mixture of two or more
    metals.
  • While steel is already an alloy that is a very
    strong metal, the addition of small amounts of
    the other metals help steel resist rusting.
    Depending on what element is added, you could
    create Stainless Steel or Galvanized Steel.

29
Mixtures
  • Variable combination of 2 or more pure substances.

Heterogeneous
Homogeneous
30
Mixtures
  • colloid
  • suspension
  • colloid
  • solution
  • suspension
  • Examples
  • mayonnaise
  • muddy water
  • fog
  • saltwater
  • Italian salad dressing

31
Decide if the substance is Element (A), Compound
(B), or Mixture (C)?
1. Water
B. Compound
B. Compound
2. Table Salt
A. Element
3. Oxygen
C. Mixture
4. Dirt
C. Mixture/Solution
5. Air
32
Lets try a few more!
6. Copper
A. Element
C. Solution/Mixture
7. Soda
C. Solution/Mixture
8. Steel
C. Mixture
9. Acid Rain
C. Mixture
10. Vanilla Ice-cream
33
Separating Mixtures
  • Filtration is often used to separate the solid
    and liquid parts of a suspension. The liquid part
    is called the filtrate. The solid that remains on
    the filter paper is called the residue.

34
Distillation
  • Distillation separates two substances based on
    the differences of their boiling points.
  • The substance with the lowest boiling point will
    condense and can be collected, which then
    separates the two substances.

35
Crystallization
  • A technique that results in the formation of a
    solid substance from a solution.
  • Example rock candy

36
Chromatography
  • Chromatography is a method for analyzing complex
    mixtures (such as ink) by separating them into
    the chemicals from which they are made.
  • Chromatography is used to separate and identify
    all sorts of substances in police work. Drugs
    from narcotics to aspirin can be identified in
    urine and blood samples, often with the aid of
    chromatography.

37
Elements and Compounds
38
Elements
  • Elements are pure substances that cannot be
    separated into simpler substances.
  • The elements are listed on the periodic table.
  • Ex copper, oxygen, nitrogen, gold, etc.

39
The Periodic Table
  • A Russian chemist, Dmitri Mendeleev, began
    arranging the elements by their similarities and
    their masses.

40
Compounds
  • A compound is a combination of two or more
    elements.
  • Ex water, salt, carbon dioxide
  • Compounds can be broken down into simpler
    substances by chemical means.

41
Law of Definite Proportions
  • A compound is always composed of the same
    elements in the same proportions by mass.
  • Percent by mass () mass of element x 100
  • mass of compound
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