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Matter and Measurement • matter is hierarchical (of increasing dimension, complexity, etc.) • elements are the chemical fundmental units sodium, Na, & chlorine, Cl2 • compounds are combinations of elements sodium chloride, NaCl • molecules • ionic compounds water, H2O • nucleus – protons – neutrons • electrons Feb. 3, 2006 Na: 11 protons, 11 electrons Cl: 17 protons, 17 electrons Na+ Cl- Feb. 3, 2006 States of matter ↔ Energy of particles ↔ Interactions between particles the physical state of a substance depends on the conditions: temperature pressure electric field strength etc. and on the substance: composition mixture vs. compound CD-ROM screen 1.9 the state is usually called the phase, such as “the liquid phase” kinetic (motion) energy of particles increases with increasing temperature T Feb. 3, 2006 Feb. 3, 2006 1 10-2 m 10-3 m Copper ore Feb. 3, 2006 Copper ore grains Feb. 3, 2006 10-5 m 10-10 m Copper ore grains, higher resolution Feb. 3, 2006 Copper atom clumps on silicon surface Feb. 3, 2006 2 single cell cm mm 0.2 m 10-3 µm 10-6 10-12 m CD-ROM screen 1.4 2m Copper atom, theory Feb. 3, 2006 Feb. 3, 2006 Physical properties (1 Å = 10-10 m) single cell µm Each arrow represents a decrease to 1/10th scale. molecules atoms nm 10-9 pm 10-12 •usual definition •color •gas, liquid, solid •state •melting point •T at which solid ↔ liquid •boiling point •T at which liquid ↔ gas •heat of vaporization •heat needed to convert liquid → gas •heat of fusion •heat needed to convert solid → liquid •mass per unit volume (g/L) •density •amount of substance that can •solubility dissolve per unit volume Each arrow represents a decrease to 1/10th scale. Feb. 3, 2006 Feb. 3, 2006 3 Problem: A piece of copper has a mass of 57.54 g. It is 9.36 cm long, 7.23 cm wide, and 0.95 mm thick. Calculate density (g/cm3). Density = mass (g) volume (cm 3 ) SOLUTION 1. Get dimensions in common units. 1cm = 0.095 cm 10 mm 2. Calculate volume in cubic centimeters. 0.95 mm • (9.36 cm)(7.23 cm)(0.095 cm) = 6.4 cm3 3. Calculate the density. 57.54 g = 9.0 g / cm 3 6.4 cm 3 Feb. 3, 2006 Relative Densities of the Elements Feb. 3, 2006 Feb. 3, 2006 •Be sure to notice that DENSITY is an INTENSIVE PROPERTY of matter. •INTENSIVE — does not depend on quantity of matter. Examples are density and temperature. •Contrast with EXTENSIVE — depends on quantity of matter. Examples are mass and volume. •Subdividing matter does not change intensive properties, it does change extensive properties. Styrofoam Brick Feb. 3, 2006 4 Chemical Properties and Chemical Change •Burning hydrogen (H2) in oxygen (O2) gives H2O. • Chemical change or chemical reaction involves the transformation of one or more atoms or molecules into one or more different molecules. • Physical change involves the change in state or shape of a substance while preserving its chemical identity. Feb. 3, 2006 UNITS OF MEASUREMENT Use SI units — based on the metric system length (meter, m) mass (kilogram, kg, and gram, g) time (second) temperature (Kelvin, K) Volume in liters (L) → conversion to cm3: 1 cm3 = 1 mL Feb. 3, 2006 Temperature Scales PROBLEM: PROBLEM: Mercury Mercury (Hg) (Hg) has has aa density density 33. What is the mass of 95 mL of 13.6 g/cm of 13.6 g/cm . What is the mass of 95 mL of of Hg? Hg? In In grams? grams? In In pounds? pounds? 100 oF 38 oC 311 K oF Feb. 3, 2006 oC K 5 TK = T°C + 27315 . = (T° F + 495.67) 9 5 T°C = TK − 27315 . = (T° F − 32 ) 9 9 9 T° F = {T°C } + 32 = {TK } − 459.67 5 5 Solve the problem using DIMENSIONAL (OR UNIT) ANALYSIS. Feb. 3, 2006 5 First, note that Significant figures (Significant digits) 1 cm3 = 1 mL Then, use dimensional analysis to calculate mass. 13.6 g 95 cm 3 • cm 3 = 1.3 x 10 3 g What is the mass in pounds? (1 lb = 454 g) 1.3 x 10 3 g • 1 lb 454 g = 2.8 lb Feb. 3, 2006 Rule: The last digit (on the right) is uncertain to ± 1. Rule: Leading zeros don’t count. Rule: Trailing zeros don’t count if there is no decimal point. 0.120 0.08003 200 200.0 3 SF 4 SF 1 SF 4 SF Note: Some numbers are exact, such as π = 3.14159…, and have an infinite # of SF Feb. 3, 2006 Some algebra with sig figs Algebra and significant figures Multiplication and division: final answer has the same # of SF as the least significant number used to produce it. Addition and subtraction: final answer has the same # of digits to the right of the decimal point as the number with the least # of digits to the right. 56.49 + 3.3 = 59.79 59.8 1 right of dec pt 4 SF, 2 right of dec pt 2 SF, 1 right of dec pt 56.49 × 3.3 = 186.417 190 2 SF 56.49 × π = 177.468569 177.5 4 SF Feb. 3, 2006 Feb. 3, 2006 6