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Lab Safety Classification of Matter

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How does a compound differ from an element? What does WHMIS stand for? What does HHPS stand for? It was in the lesson but is not in the note. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lab Safety Classification of Matter


1
Lab Safety Classification of Matter
  • Lesson 1
  • 2012

2
Warning, Todays lesson is very long. This
should all be review...
3
Lab Safety
  • Locate all safety devices in the room
  • Fire extinguisher
  • Fire Blanket
  • First Aid
  • Eye wash
  • Chemical spill clean up tools
  • Broken glass disposal.
  • Lab Coats
  • Goggles

4
Safe Lab Techniques
  • When lighting a Bunsen Burner, ensure all long
    hair and loose clothing is out of the way
  • When smelling a chemical waft it towards you. DO
    NOT SMELL it directly
  • Put broken glass in the designated bin
  • When something is spilled. Notify Mr. Linseman
    immediately
  • If something breaks. Notify Mr. Linseman
    immediately

5
Safe Lab Techniques
  • Never eat or drink in the lab
  • Wash hands after handling chemicals
  • When performing a lab, always stay standing, do
    not sit down.
  • Never leave a Bunsen burner unattended
  • Always use appropriate equipment
  • Always wear safety goggles
  • Never wear open toed shoes in the lab

6
WHMIS
  • The Workplace Hazardous Materials Information
    System (WHMIS) is Canada's national hazard
    communication standard.
  • The key elements of the system are cautionary
    labelling of containers of WHMIS "controlled
    products", the provision of material safety data
    sheets (MSDSs) and worker education programs

7
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS A COMPRESSED GAS
  • This class includes compressed gases, dissolved
    gases, and gases liquefied by compression or
    refrigeration.

8
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS B FLAMMABLE AND COMBUSTIBLE MATERIAL
  • This class includes solids, liquids, and gases
    capable of catching fire in the presence of a
    spark or open flame under normal working
    conditions.

9
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS C OXIDIZING MATERIAL
  • These materials increase the risk of fire if they
    come in contact with flammable or combustible
    materials.

10
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS D POISONOUS AND INFECTIOUS
    MATERIALDivision 1 Materials Causing Immediate
    and Serious Toxic Effects
  • These materials can cause death or immediate
    injury when a person is exposed to small amounts.
    Examples sodium cyanide, hydrogen sulphide

11
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS D POISONOUS AND INFECTIOUS
    MATERIALDivision 2 Materials Causing Other
    Toxic EFFECTS
  • These materials can cause life-threatening and
    serious long-term health problems as well as less
    severe but immediate reactions in a person who is
    repeatedly exposed to small amounts.

12
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS D POISONOUS AND INFECTIOUS
    MATERIALDivision 3 Biohazardous Infectious
    MATERIAL
  • These materials contain harmful micro-organisms
    that have been classified into Risk Groups 2, 3,
    and 4 as determined by the World Health
    Organization (WHO) or the Medical Research
    Council of Canada.

13
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS E CORROSIVE MATERIAL
  • This class includes caustic and acid materials
    that can destroy the skin or eat through metals.
    Examples sodium hydroxide, hydrochloric acid,
    nitric acid

14
WHMIS Symbols
  • CLASS F DANGEROUSLY REACTIVE MATERIAL
  • These products may self-react dangerously (for
    example, they may explode) upon standing or when
    exposed to physical shock or to increased
    pressure or temperature, or they emit toxic gases
    when exposed to water.

15
Two Types of WHMIS Labels
  • WHMIS labels include first aid information and
    details about storage, handling, and disposal.
    There are two types of WHMIS labels
  • - Supplier labels
  • - Workplace labels

16
Supplier Labels
  • Supplier labels are used by the people who make
    each chemical.
  • Supplier labels have a strict format.
  • Hashed marked identifier label
  • Written in English and French
  • Supplier Name
  • Precautionary measures
  • Risk Phrases
  • First Aid Treatment
  • Name of product
  • Hazard Symbols
  • Statement referring to MSDS

17
Supplier Labels
18
Workplace Labels
  • After chemicals are rebottled, a workplace label
    my replace the Supplier label. Workplace labels
    are allowed to have different formats.
  • A Workplace label contains less information than
    the Supplier label, but it still has enough
    information to help you use the chemical safely.

19
Workplace Labels
  • Requirements
  • Product name
  • Information for safe handling of the product
  • Statement referring to MSDS
  • WHMIS hazard symbols (optional)

20
Household Chemicals
  • Each chemical found in your home has a special
    purpose. The properties of the chemical determine
    what it will react with. In general we do not
    want products in our homes to react with each
    other.
  • On the other hand there are products that we do
    want to react with other materials. These are
    normally cleaners that contain materials such as
    bleach and ammonia, which are very reactive
    chemicals

21
Hazardous Household Product Symbols
  • In order to notify users which chemicals are
    dangerous and in what ways they are dangerous we
    use Hazardous Household Product Symbols.
  • The HHPS has four categories of Hazardous
    materials as well as three levels of severity.

22
Hazardous Household Product Symbols
The HHPS has four categories of Hazardous
Chemicals The symbols are similar to that
of WHMIS with the exception of the Explosive
symbol.
 flammable  toxic  corrosive  explosive
23
Hazardous Household Product Symbols
  • The HHPS has three levels of severity
  • Caution is the least sever of the three symbols,
    warning is more severe and danger is the most
    severe.

24
The Classification of MatterUnit 2 - Chemistry
  • Lesson 1
  • February 24th, 2011

25
Matter has many forms
  • Matter anything that has mass and volume.
  • Mass is a measure of the quantity of an object.
    (g, kg,)
  • Volume is a measure of space taken up (mL, L)
  • Matter can be found as a solid, liquid or gas.
    (or even a combination of these)

26
Changes of State
  • There are 3 states of matter
  • Solid
  • Liquid
  • gas

27
Terms for changes of state
  • Melting Change from a solid to a liquid
  • Evaporation - Change from a liquid to a gas
  • Condensation - Change from a gas to a liquid
  • Freezing - Change from a liquid to a solid
  • Sublimation - Change from a solid to a gas
  • Deposition - Change from a gas to a solid

28
Terms for changes of state
29
  • The temperature at which a solid turns into a
    liquid is called the melting point. (water is
    0C) The reverse process, freezing, occurs at the
    freezing point.

30
  • the temperature at which a liquid turns to a gas
    is called the boiling point. The boiling point is
    the same temperature as the condensing point, the
    temperature at which a gas changes into a liquid

31
The Particle Theory of Matter (4 points)
  • Way of describing matter.
  • All matter is composed of very tiny objects
    called particles.
  • Each Pure substance has its own kind of
    particles, different from the particles of other
    pure substances.

32
The Particle Theory of Matter (4 points)
  • 3. Particles present in matter are always in
    motion. They may be vibrating back and forth, as
    in a solid, or moving in all directions, as in a
    gas. In a liquid, particles stay close together
    but can slide past one another.
  • 4. The particles in a substance attract each
    other. The amount of attraction is different for
    different kinds of particles. All particles have
    spaces between them.

33
The Particle Theory of Matter (4 points)
  • The distances between the particles change for
    different states of matter.

34
Particles and Heat
  • In ice, the particles of water vibrate in place
    but cannot move around. They attract each other
    strongly, forming a solid.
  • As heat is added, the particles of water vibrate
    more quickly, which weakens the attraction
    between them, allowing them to slide past each
    other.

35
  • This allows water to flow as a liquid. When
    enough heat is added, the particles of water
    break free from each other and separate, forming
    a gas.

36
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37
Classifying Matter
  • All matter is made up of different types or
    combinations of particles.
  • Different types and combinations of particles
    give every type of matter particular
    characteristics, or properties.
  • Characteristic that describes a substance.

38
Classification Of Matter
39
Pure Substances (2)
  • A pure substance is made up of only one kind of
    matter
  • unique set of properties
  • colour, hardness, boiling point, and melting
    point.
  • A pure substance is either an element (gold) or a
    compound (sugar).

40
Element
  • A pure substance that cannot be broken down into
    any simpler substance by chemical means.
  • Each element has its own name and symbol.
    Example Gold (Au)

41
Compound
  • A pure substance that is made from two or more
    elements that are combined together chemically.
  • Example, water (H2O) is a compound containing the
    elements hydrogen and oxygen.

42
Mixtures (3)
  • A mixture is a combination of pure substances.
  • Each substance remains in its original, pure
    form, although each is not always easy to see
    distinctly once the mixture is made.

43
Mechanical Mixture (heterogeneous mixture)
  • Different substances that make up the mixture are
    visible
  • Hetero different

44
Suspension
  • A cloudy mixture in which tiny particles of one
    substance are held within another.
  • Can be separated out when the mixture is poured
    through filter paper.
  • A suspension is also a heterogeneous mixture.

45
Solution (homogeneous mixture)
  • Different substances that make it up are not
    individually visible
  • One substance is dissolved in another
  • The prefix homo- means same, and all parts of a
    homogeneous mixture look the same.

46
Quick Questions
  • 1. How is a compound different from an element?
    Give an example of each.
  • 2. What is the difference between a mixture and a
    pure substance?
  • 3. How is a suspension different from a solution?
  • 4. Classify each of the following as either a
    pure substance or a mixture.
  • (a) Pop is composed of water, sugar, and carbon
    dioxide.
  • (b) Carbon dioxide is composed of carbon and
    oxygen chemically
  • combined.
  • (c) Sand is composed of white grains and black
    grains.
  • (d) The graphite at the centre of a pencil is
    composed of carbon.

47
Questions hand in
  • What are two features that all forms of matter
    have?
  • Use the particle theory of matter to explain what
    makes a liquid different from a solid of the same
    substance.
  • Compare the amount of space between particles of
    a gas with that of a liquid of the same
    substance.
  • What is the effect of adding heat to the
    particles in a sample of matter?
  • What is the difference between the melting of
    water and the melting point of water?
  • Give two examples of pure substances that were
    not given in the lesson.

48
  • Give two examples of Mixtures that were not given
    in the lesson.
  • What kind of mixture would apple juice is
    classified as? Explain how you know.
  • What kind of mixture would a garden salad is
    classified as?
  • How does a compound differ from an element?
  • What does WHMIS stand for?
  • What does HHPS stand for? It was in the lesson
    but is not in the note.
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