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Title: Chapter 2 Notes II


1
Chapter 2 Notes II
  • CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL CHANGES

2
IV. Scientific Method
  • The process researchers use to carry out their
    investigations. It is a logical approach to
    solving problems.

3
A. Steps
  • Ask a question
  • Observe and collect data
  • Formulate a hypothesis (a testable if-then
    statement). The hypothesis serves as a basis for
    making predictions and for carrying out further
    experiments.
  • Test your hypothesis Requires experimentation
    that provides data to support or refute your
    hypothesis.

4
B. Terms to Know
  • 1.      Law vs. theory
  • Scientific (natural) Law a general statement
    based on the observed behavior of matter to which
    no exceptions are known.
  • Theory a broad generalization that explains a
    body of facts or phenomena.

5
1. Quantitative vs. qualitative data
  • Quantitative numerical (mass, density)
  • Quantity - number unit
  • Qualitative descriptive (color, shape)

6
Chemistry the study of MATTER
  • I. Chemistry The branch of science that deals
    with the identification of the substances of
    which matter is composed the investigation of
    their properties and the ways in which they
    interact, combine, and change and the use of
    these processes to form new substances.
  • (Matter anything that has mass and takes up
    space)

7
PROPERTIES OF MATTER
  • What is matter?
  • What is mass?

Anything that has mass and takes up space
The amount of matter an object contains
8
Chemical Compositionmixture or pure
substance?
  • Before we can even begin to consider matter from
    a chemical point of view, we need to know
    something about its composition is the stuff I
    am looking at a single substance, or is it
    a mixture? Think of a sample of salt (sodium
    chloride) as opposed to a solution of salt in
    water a mixture of salt and water.

9
SUBSTANCES
  • A substance is matter that has a definite and
    uniform composition

10
MIXTURES
  • A mixture is a physical blend of two or more
    substances. They can be physically separated.
    How?

One type of stuff
11
HETEROGENEOUS vs. HOMOGENEOUS
  • There are two different types of mixtures.
  • A heterogeneous mixture is one that has more than
    one phase (part of uniform composition)
  • A homogeneous mixture has only one phase.

12
CuSO4 Solution
Orange Juice
Oil and Water
  • Mixtures matter that can be physically separated
    into component parts (pure substances).
  • a. homogeneous mixture has uniform composition
    also called a solution
  • b. heterogeneous mixture does not have a
    uniform composition

13
MIXTURES
physically
separable
14
HETEROGENEOUS OR HOMOGENEOUS?
  • Saltwater
  • Spaghetti sauce
  • Muddy water
  • Cough syrup
  • Salad
  • Brass

15
TYPES OF SUBSTANCES
  • There are two different types of substances

ELEMENTS
AND
COMPOUNDS
16
ELEMENTS
  • An element is the simplest forms of matter.
  • Each element is represented by a chemical symbol.

17
COMPOUNDS
  • A compound is a substance that can be separated
    into simpler substances only by chemical means

18
CuSO4
Cu
  • Pure Substances when component parts of a
    mixture can no longer be physically separated
    into simpler substances. Pure substances are
    either compounds or elements.
  • a. Compounds can be decomposed by a chemical
    change. Two or more elements bonded together.
  • b. Elements cannot be decomposed by a chemical
    change. Will appear no the periodic table.

19
TYPES OF MATTER
physically
separable
chemically
separable
20
III. Classification of Matter
  • Matter
  • Can it be physically separated?
  • Yes
    No
  • Mixtures Pure Substances
  • Is the composition uniform? Can it be decomposed
    by an ordinary chemical reaction?
  • Yes No Yes
    No
  • Homogeneous Heterogeneous Compounds
    Elements
  • Mixtures Mixtures (water, sodium
    (gold, oxygen,
  • (Solutions) (Suspensions chloride, sucrose)
    carbon)
  • (air, sugar water, or Colliods)
  • salt water) (granite, wood,
  • muddy water)

21
Techniques used for mixture separation
  • Filtration (sand from water)
  • Centrifugation (butterfat from milk)
  • Evaporation (salt from water)
  • Distillation (water from salt)
  • Chromatography (separating pigments in ink)  
  •  

22
Filtration (sand from water)
23
Centrifuge Solid or liquid particles of
different densities are separated by rotating
them in a tube in a horizontal circle. The dense
particles tend to move along the length of the
tube to a greater radius of rotation, displacing
the lighter particles to the other end.
24
Evaporation (salt from water)
  •  

25
  • Distillation
  • A liquid is partly boiled away the first
    portions of the condensed vapor will be enriched
    in the lower-boiling component.
  •  
  •  

26
Chromatography As a liquid or gaseous mixture
flows along a column containing an adsorbent
material, the more strongly-adsorbed components
tend to move more slowly and emerge later than
the less-strongly adsorbedcomponents.  
27
 
Liquid-liquid Extraction 
  • Two mutually-insoluble liquids, one containing
    two or more solutes (dissolved substances), are
    shaken together. Each solute will concentrate in
    the liquid in which it is more soluble.

28
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
  • A quality or condition of a substance that can be
    observed or measured without changing the
    substances composition
  • What are some examples?

29
II. Physical Properties of Matter
Physical properties of matter are categorized as
either Intensive or Extensive
  • Intensive - Properties that do not depend on the
    amount of the matter present.
  • Ex Color, Odor, Luster, Malleability,
    Ductility, Conductivity, Hardness,
    Melting/Freezing Point, Boiling Point, Density
  •  Extensive - Properties that do depend on the
    amount of matter present.
  • Ex Mass, Volume, Weight, Length

30
STATES OF MATTER
  • Matters state is a physical property

31
SIDENOTE
  • A gaseous substance that is found as a solid or
    liquid at room temperature is called vapor.

32
PHYSICAL CHANGES
  • A physical change is one that does not involve
    altering the chemical composition.

33
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
  • The ability of a substance to react and form new
    substances is called a chemical property.
  • In a chemical reaction, one or more substances
    change into new substances.
  • A reaction starts with the reactants, and the
    substances formed are called products.

34
4 CLUES TO CHEMICAL REACTION
35
CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL CHANGE?
  • Baking cookies
  • Boiling water
  • Dissolving salt
  • Burning firewood
  • Milk spoiling
  • Metal rusting
  • Tearing paper
  • Melting ice

36
LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MASS
  • During any chemical reaction, the quantity of
    matter is unchanged. The mass of the products
    always equals the mass of the reactants.
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