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Scientific Method Technology Observation Applied Chemistry 1. Inorganic Chemistry • Inorganic is the study of matter that does NOT contain Carbon ________ • Inorganic chemists study the structure, function, synthesis, and identity of noncarbon compounds • Polymers, Metallurgy 2. Organic Chemistry • Organic is the study of carbon matter that contains ______ • Organic chemists study the structure, function, synthesis, and identity of carbon compounds • Useful in petroleum industry, pharmaceuticals, polymers 3. Physical Chemistry • Physical chemistry is the physics of chemistry… the forces of matter • Rates and energy transfers • Much of p-chem is computational 4. Analytical Chemistry • Analytical chemistry is the study of high precision measurement • Find composition and identity of chemicals • Lead in drinking H2O • Forensics, quality control, medical tests 5. Biochemistry • Biochemistry is the study of chemistry in living things ______ • Cross between biology and chemistry • Pharmaceuticals and genetics Properties of Matter Extensive properties depend on the amount of matter that is present. Volume Mass Energy Content (think Calories!) Intensive properties do not depend on the amount of matter present, but type of matter. Melting point, Boiling point Color Density Hardness Law of conservation of mass • In all physical and chemical changes, the mass of the reactants MUST equal the mass of the products. Scientific Method 1. State the problem clearly./Make Observ. 2. Formulate a hypothesis 3. Test the hypothesis. 4. Evaluate the data to form a conclusion. If the conclusion is valid, then it becomes a theory. If the theory is found to be true over along period of time (usually 20+ years) with no counter examples, it may be considered a law. 5. Share the results. Chapter 2 Chemistry is the study of matter and the changes it undergoes 1. Matter is anything that occupies space and has mass. “stuff” 2. A substance is a form of matter that has a definite composition and distinct properties. water, ammonia, sucrose, gold, oxygen Phase Differences Solid – definite volume and shape; particles packed in fixed positions. Liquid – definite volume but indefinite shape; particles close together but not in fixed positions Gas – neither definite volume nor definite shape; particles are at great distances from one another Plasma – high temperature, ionized phase of matter as found on the sun. Physical Properties What are some physical properties? • color • melting and boiling point • odor • Create a definition for “physical properties” Physical Changes –can be observed without changing the identity of the substance Physical change Ex. • boiling of a liquid • melting of a solid • dissolving a solid in a liquid to give a homogeneous mixture • — a SOLUTION. A mixture is a combination of two or more substances in which the substances retain their distinct identities. 1. Homogenous mixture – composition of the mixture is the same throughout. soft drink, milk, salt water 2. Heterogeneous mixture – composition is not uniform throughout. Rocky Road Ice Cream, soil, pizza chicken noodle soup Types of Mixtures Heterogeneous – visibly separate phases Homogeneous – Same throughout Physical means can be used to separate a mixture into its pure components. magnet distillation Filtration Separation of a Mixture Distillation Separation of a Mixture The components of dyes such as ink may be separated by paper chromatography. An element is a substance that cannot be separated into simpler substances by chemical means. • “116” elements have been identified • 82 elements occur naturally on Earth gold, aluminum, lead, oxygen, carbon • 34 elements have been created by scientists technetium, americium, seaborgium A compound is a substance composed of atoms of two or more elements chemically united in fixed proportions. Compounds can only be separated into their pure components (elements) by chemical means. Water (H2O) Glucose (C6H12O6) Ammonia (NH3) Separation of a Compound The Electrolysis of water Compounds must be separated by chemical means. With the application of electricity, water can be separated into its elements Reactant Water H2O Products Hydrogen + Oxygen H2 + O2 Matter Flowchart Fill in the flow chart AND provide and example for each box. Matter yes Can it be physically separated? Mixture yes Is the composition uniform? Homogenous no Pure substance no Heterogenous yes Can it be chemically decomposed? Compound no Element Organization of Matter Matter Mixtures: a) Homogeneous (Solutions) b) Heterogeneous Pure Substances Elements Compounds Atoms Nucleus Electrons Protons Neutrons Quarks Quarks Physical vs. Chemical Properties • Examples: – melting point physical – flammable chemical – density physical – magnetic physical – tarnishes in air chemical Physical vs. Chemical Changes • Examples: – rusting iron Chemical – dissolving in water Physical – burning a log Chemical – melting ice Physical – grinding spices Physical Sure Signs of a Chemical Change • Change in Temp • Light • Gas Produced (not from boiling!) • Precipitate – a solid formed by mixing two liquids together • Color Change??? Use it or not? • Pure Chemistry – pursuit of chemical knowledge for its own sake. • Applied Chemistry – research that is directed toward a practical goal or application.