Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
1 Meet the Elements! 2 WHAT IS CHEMISTRY? • Chemistry is the study of matter and the changes that it undergoes. 3 WHAT IS MATTER? • Matter is anything that has mass and volume. • Mass refers to the measure of the amount of material in an object ( measures the resistance to an object being moved). • Volume refers to the amount of space an object occupies. 4 MATTER HAS 4 STATES • Solid • Liquid • Gas • Plasma 5 3 STATES OF MATTER 6 7 SOLIDS • State of matter in which the particles are closely packed. • Solids have definite shape and definite volume • Solids essentially cannot be compressed. 8 LIQUIDS • Particles are arranged so they can slide past one another. • Liquids take the shape of their container and have definite volume. • Liquids essentially cannot be compressed. 9 GASES • Particles are spread out widely. • Gases have neither definite shape nor definite volume. • Are very compressible. 10 PLASMA • An electrically neutral gas of ions (charged particles) and electrons (negatively charged particles)…VERY HIGH ENERGY!! Thought to be found in stars. • Is present when nuclear fusion occurs..requires a temp of 100,000,000 0C. 11 The smallest unit of matter is the atom • are the smallest unit of matter capable of existing by themselves. • 2 or more atoms chemically bonded together are referred to as a molecule. 12 MODELS OF THE ATOM orbits 13 Atoms are composed of the following subatomic particles. • Protons- Positively charged particles located in the nucleus of the atom. • Neutrons- Non-charged nuclear particles located in the nucleus of the atom. • Electrons- Negatively charged particles that move around the nucleus located in the electron cloud 14 Matter with only one type of atom are called elements. • Each element has a unique number of protons in the nucleus of its atoms. This is what defines that particular element. 15 ELEMENTS (CONT). • Chemists use elemental symbols as a shorthand way of representing elements. • These symbols consist of 1, 2, or 3 letters (only the 1st is uppercase). • Many elemental symbols show the Latin origin of the element’s name. 16 Periodic Table of Elements • 114 elements • Vertical column = groups • Horizontal rows = periods • Traits are organized by similar properties 17 ALL MATTER CAN BE CLASSIFIED AS EITHER A SUBSTANCE OR A MIXTURE • A substance is matter that has a fixed composition and distinct properties. • A mixture is a combination of 2 or more substances, each of which retains it’s properties. 18 Substances can be either elements or compounds. • An element is a substance in which all atoms have the same number of protons. • Elements cannot be decomposed into simpler substances. 19 Compounds • Compounds are substances in which 2 or more elements chemically combine to form a new substance with new properties. • Compounds can be decomposed into simpler substances. 20 COMPOUNDS CAN BE CHEMICALLY BROKEN DOWN • This can be accomplished through the use of heat energy (thermal decomposition) or electric current (electrolysis). 21 EVERY SUBSTANCE HAS A UNIQUE SET OF PROPERTIES • Properties are characteristics that allow us to recognize and distinguish a substance from other substances. 22 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES • Physical properties are properties that can be observed or measured without changing the identity and composition of the matter. • Physical properties include color, odor, density, melting pt., boiling pt., malleability, ductility, hardness, etc. 23 CHEMICAL PROPERTIES • Chemical properties describe the way a substance may change or react to form other substances. • To observe this property you must carry out a chemical change. • An example would be burning in the presence of oxygen. 24 MATTER UNDERGOES CHANGE • This may be physical change or chemical change. 25 PHYSICAL CHANGES • In physical changes, the substance changes its physical appearance but not its composition. • An example would be changing states. – Evaporation of water into water vapor 26 CHEMICAL CHANGES • In a chemical change, a substance is changed into 1 or more new substances with new properties. • Chemical change involves rearrangement of atoms. – Aluminum rusting, fireworks exploding 27 PHYSICAL CHANGE 28 INTENSIVE PROPERTIES • Are independent of sample size. • Examples include density, temperature, melting point, etc. (1 gal of water or 1 cup of water: both have same boil point.) • Can be used to identify a substance. 29 EXTENSIVE PROPERTIES • Are properties that depend on sample size. • Examples include mass, volume, and length • 1 gal of water will have a greater mass than 1 cup of water. 30 Mixtures can be either homogeneous or heterogeneous. • Homogeneous mixtures are uniform (have the same composition) throughout. Homogeneous mixtures are also called solutions. Ex: salt, air, water • Heterogeneous mixtures are nonuniform throughout. Ex: sand, wood, rock 31 MIXTURES CAN BE PHYSICALLY SEPARATED • Filtration • Distillation • Chromatography 32 FILTRATION • In filtration, the mixture is separated based on differences in particle size. 33 DISTILLATION • Distillation separates components based on differences in boiling point. 35 DISTILLATION APPARATUS 36 CHROMATOGRAPHY • Separates mixture components based on differences in attraction to a surface. 37 40 Name Those Molecules 41 CHEMICAL CHANGE 42 Measurement 1.7 43 SCIENTIFIC DATA FALLS INTO 2 CATEGORIES • Qualitative data • Quantitative data 44 Qualitative • Qualitative data consists of descriptive terms. There is no use of numbers. • Determines the presence or absence of a particular substance in a mix. – Ex: water is a liquid 45 Quantitative • Quantitative data consists of measurements (numbers) • Determines the amount of substance that is in a sample. – Water has a boiling point of 100degrees Celsius 46 Scientific Method • Hypothesis : possible explanation of an observation. • Theory: set of tested hypothesis that give an explanation of a natural phenomena • Law: concise statement or explanation 47 Apples, Volkswagens, Pigeons or Metric? UNITS ARE EVERYTHING! Chemistry is in the details. The slightest change or mistake can mean a world of difference. This IS going to drive you nuts this year, and you will hate chemistry, me, and the universe, but we go’tta do it! 48 MEASUREMENT • At one time measurement was inconsistent and therefore, unreliable. • Scientists need to be able to repeat each other’s experiments to verify/modify scientific knowledge. • To assist in this process, all scientist use the SI system of measurement. (AKA your new best friend!) 49 Base Units mass length time electric current temperature light intensity amt. Subst. gram meter seconds ampere Kelvin candela mole g m s A K cd mol l 50 MEASUREMENT (CONT) • Scientist often use prefixes in conjunction with the basic unit of measure. • The indicate decimal fractions or multiples of various units. – Ex: milli = 10-3 1 milligram = 1 mg = 10 -3 grams 51 Like what is a centimeter again? 52 MEASUREMENT (CONT) Prefix Giga megakilohectodekadecicentimillimicronanopico- Symbol G M k h da d c m µ n p Exp. Represent. 109 106 103 102 101 10-1 10-2 10-3 10-6 10-9 10-12 MEMORIZE THIS TABLE !!!! ROYO pg 17 table 1.3 53 Question • What is the name for: • 10-9 gram = • 10-6 seconds = • 10-3 meter = 54 USEFUL STUFF • Back cover of your text “useful conversions” • Memorize: 454 grams =1 lb 2.54 cm = 1 in 1.6 km = 1 mi 1 m = 3.33 ft 1 hr = 3600 sec 55 TEMPERATURE • Think of temperature as a measure of the “hotness” of an object. • Scientist use both the Kelvin (SI) and Celsius scale to express temperature. • Kelvin scale is an absolute scale. Idea: All molecular motion would stop at 0 K. 56 TEMPERATURE (CONT) • The Celsius scale is based on the freezing point and boiling point of water. • 1 Kelvin unit of measure is equal to 1 unit of measure on the Celsius scale…the 2 scales simply have different “starting points” • There is no Degrees symbol in Kelvin 57 58 TEMPERATURE (CONT) K = 0C + 273 MEMORIZE THESE CONVERSIONS!!! 59 Scientific notation • Break VERY LARGE or very small numbers into manageable bits • The number 123,000,000,000 in scientific notation is written as : 61 To write a number in scientific notation: Put the decimal after the first digit and drop the zeroes. 62 To find the exponent • count the number of places from the decimal to the end of the number. In 123,000,000,000 there are 11 places. 63 UNCERTAINTY IN MEASUREMENT • In scientific work, numbers can be exact or inexact. • This will be a huge part of your research paper and how you collect your data!!!! 64 UNCERTAINTY IN MEASUREMENT (CONT) • Inexact numbers – numbers obtained by measurement. They can be inexact due to human error and or the limitations of the equipment that you use. Exact numbers – known values or quantities Ex: 1 dozen eggs = 12 eggs All conversion factors are exact numbers! 65 UNCERTAINTY IN MEASUREMENT (CONT) • THERE ARE ALWAYS LIMITATIONS IN THE EQUIPMENT USED TO MEASURE QUANTITIES (EQUIPMENT ERRORS) AND THERE ARE DIFFERENCES IN HOW DIFFERENT PEOPLE MAKE THE SAME MEASUREMENT (HUMAN ERROR). 66 UNCERTAINTY IN MEASUREMENT (CONT) • UNCERTAINTIES ALWAYS EXIST IN MEASURED QUANTITIES!!! 67 To Describe Our Measurements , We Use Precision and Accuracy • Precision refers to how close a series of measurements are to one another. • Accuracy refers to how closely individual measurements are to a “true” or accepted value. 68 Precision, Accuracy, Both ? 69 In general, the more precise a measurement, the more accurate it will be • This is assuming that all measuring devices are calibrated and the person doing the measuring is well trained. • BECAUSE OF THIS, SCIENTISTS PERFORM MULTIPLE TRIALS OF THE SAME EXPERIMENT. 70 Which would you use? 71 IDEA: EVERY MEASURING DEVICE HAS ITS LIMITATIONS • Because of this, when recording data, scientists always include an “uncertain” number (the rightmost digit in the number). • Tied in with this is the concept of significant figures. 72 SIGNIFICANT FIGURES (CONT) • Significant figures are all the certain digits of a measured quantity plus one uncertain digit (the last). • “sig figs” indicate how precise a number is 73 SIGNIFICANT FIGURE RULES 1. All numbers are significant except zeros at beginning of the number. 9.12 0.00912 0.0912 0.912 all have three SF Leading Zeros ARE NOT significant 74 Rule 2 Zeros between non- zeros are significant 1005 = 4 SF 1.03 = 3 SF Captive Zeros ARE significant 75 Rule 3 • Zeros that are at the end of a number and after a decimal point are significant. 9.00 9.10 90.0 all have three SF Trailing Zeros ARE significant 76 SIG FIGS RULES (CONT) 4. When a number ends in zeros but has no decimal point, the zeros may or may not be significant. We use scientific notation to clarify. e.g 100 has 1 known sig fig, but 1.00 x 102 has 3 sig figs. NOTE!!!!!!! 77 Question • How many Sig figs? 4.003 6.023 x 1023 5000 0.00134 Write 5000 with three sig figs. 78 SIG. FIG CALCULATION RULES • When multiplying or dividing, the answer has the same total number of sig figs as the measurement with the least number of sig figs. Example: 1.06 m x 13.400 m = 14.204 m2 14.2 m2 3SF 5SF 3 SF Round when the answer contains too many digits. You must have correct SF and UNITS for credit! 79 More Rules! • In addition or subtraction, the answer has as many digits after the decimal point as the measurement with the fewest number of digits after the decimal point measurement). – Example: • 38.5200 cm - 11.4 cm = 27.12 cm 6 SF 3 SF 4 digits 1 digit 27.1 cm 3 SF 1 digit • When doing multi-step calculations, round at the end. 80 Question • Find the volume of a box with the following measurements: L = 27.3 cm W = 15.5 cm H = 5.4 cm 81 Answer L = 27.3 cm 3 SF W = 15.5 cm H = 5.4 cm 3 SF 2 SF 2285.01 cm3 -> 2.3 x 103 cm3 82 PEMDAS Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally ( ) Zy X ÷ + - 83 Multiple function equations 8.925 - 8.904 x 100 = 0.23529 8.925 84 (9.04 – 8.23 + 21.954 + 81.0) /3.1416 85 9.2 x 100.65 8.321 + 4.026 75 86 • 0.1654 + 2.07 – 2.114 = 0.12 87 • Derived units , uncertainty in measurement, dimensional analysis 88 RECALL • SI units tell us our base units • • • • Mass = grams g Time = seconds s Temperature = Kelvin K Length = meter m 89 DERIVED SI UNITS (CONT) • In the lab, scientists use graduated cylinders, burets, pipets, and syringes to measure volume. 90 91 PROBLEM • Sometimes scientist have to convert from one unit of measure to another (e.g. it would be inappropriate to describe the distance from the Earth to the moon in µm). • To do so, scientist use a tool called dimensional analysis or factor-label method. 92 DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS (CONT) • Dimensional analysis is a problem-solving technique where a quantity is expressed equivalently using a different type of unit through the use of 1 or more conversion factors. • This insures that we will calculate the covert numerical value as well as the correct units. 93 DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS (CONT) • A conversion factor is a fraction whose numerator and denominator are the same quantity expressed in different units. • E.g. 1 ft/12 inch or 365 days/year 94 DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS (CONT) • What volume, in L, does a 37.3 mL sample occupy? • 37.3 mL x __10-3_L____ = 0.0373 L 1 mL 95 DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS (CONT) • How many cm exist in a 8.50 in sample? • 8.50 in x 2.54 cm 1 in = 21.6 cm 96 General Rule of Thumb 1. Begin the conversion by looking at the units given and desired. 2. Identify one/ many conversion factors that will take you from the given to the desired units Given unit x Desired Unit = Desired Unit Given Unit 97 Convert 8.00 m to in 8.00 m x 1 cm x 10-2 m 1 in = 315 in 2.54 cm OR 8.00 m x 102 cm x 1 in 1m 2.54 cm = 315 in 98 Question 1.) 3.85m to mm 2.) How many cm are in 6.5 miles (hint start with what you know) 99 Answer 3.85 m x 1mm = 3850 m 10-3m 6.5mi x 1600m x 102cm = 1.0 x 106 cm 1 mi 1m 6.5mi x 5280 ft x 12in x 2.54 cm = 1.0 x 106cm 1 mi 1 ft 1 in 6.5 mi x 1 km x 105cm = 1.0 x 106cm 0.62137 mi 1 km 100 DERIVED SI UNITS • Derived SI units are used to measure quantities expressed as combinations of SI units. • Area = length in m x width in m = m2 101 COMMON DERIVED UNITS Want to find Formula Derived Unit Area length x width m2 Volume length x width x height m3 Density mass/volume g/L Molar mass mass/amt of substance g/mol Concentration amt. of substance/volume Mol/L Energy force x length N-m 102 DERIVED SI UNITS (CONT) • Volume = l x w x h = m x m x m = m3 The volume of liquids is often measured in mL. 1 cm3 = 1 mL 1 dm3 = 1 L 103 Cubing conversation factors • 13 cm3 to dm3 104 105 Density • Mass in a unit volume of a substance Density = Mass / Volume Units = g/cm3 or g/ml MEMORIZE!!!! Density of Water = 1.00 g/ml 106 Density Cont. 107 Question 1. Find the density of 1.00 x 102 g of mercury that occupies a volume of 7.36 cm3 . 2. Find the volume of 65.0 grams of methanol with a density of 0.791 g/ml 108 Challenge question • What is the mass in grams of a cube of gold (d = 19.32 g/cm3). The length of the cube of gold is 2.00 cm 109 Answer • Find the mass from the volume of the cube and its density. Volume of a cube is given by its length. Mass = Volume x Density 8.00 cm3 (19.32 g) = 154 g 1 cm3 110 • Flash Example 111