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matter matter • Anything that has mass and takes up space chemistry chemistry • Study of matter and how it changes Physical property Physical property • Characteristic that can be observed without changing it into a different substance • Example: freezing point, texture, color, temperature Chemical property Chemical property • Ability to change into difference substances • Example: rusting, flammability Physical change Physical change • Alters the form or appearance of matter but does not turn any substance into different substance • Examples: changes in states of matter (melting of snow), cutting, folding, shredding Chemical change Chemical change • Chemical reaction • Substance transforms into another substance • Example: burning wood ashes + gas endothermic Endothermic change • Change in which energy is absorbed Example: melting of ice *Feels cool Exothermic change Exothermic change • Energy is given off • Feels warm mixture mixture Two or more materials combined together Example: salad, hot chocolate, pancakes solution solution • Special mixture when a material dissolves in water Example: salt water dissolving dissolving • One material disperses evenly into another material so the first one seems to disappear Example: stirring sugar in tea Post-it Check 1. Name the 3 mixtures you made. 2. How was the salt and water different from the others after you added water and stirred? 3. What are the two ways used for separating mixtures? evaporation evaporation • Liquid turns to gas and disperses to the air, leaving any dissolved solid material behind crystal crystal • Solid form of a material that can be identified by its properties such as shape, color, and pattern Question???? Your challenge is to design a method to separate this mixture of solid materials so that the gravel ends in the G cup, the powder in the P cup, and the salt in the S cup. Hmmm… Have you designed your method? Have you separated the gravel? Have you separated the powder? Have you separated the salt? Question???? How much salt can you dissolve in 50 ml of water? Materials: Water bottle post-it Funnel Salt Blue scoop Filter Balance Gram pieces Syringe Tub of water Saturating a Solution 1. Add 50 ml to the bottle 2. Add one scoop of salt at a time, put the cap on and shake. Keep doing this until you see salt at the bottom. 3. Pour the bottle through the funnel using a wet coffee filter. What remains is the saturated solution. 4. Find the mass of your saturated solution using a balance. Put the saturated solution on one side and 50 ml of plain water on the other. Add gram pieces to the plain water until they are balanced. Saturated solution Saturated solution • When solid material is added to a solution until no more will dissolve 2 parts to a solution Solute: solid that dissolves in the liquid Solvent: the liquid Post-it Check Complete this Claims and Evidence Claims Evidence I know it took _________ grams of Salt to saturate 50 ml of water. I know this because… Heterogeneous mixture • Can see the different parts and can easily be separated • Example: salad Homogeneous mixture Homogeneous mixture • So evenly mixed can’t see the different parts • Example: solution, air solubility solubility • The property that substances have of dissolving in solvents concentration concentration • The amount of material dissolved in a volume (measurement) of liquid. element element • Substance that cannot be broken down into any other substances • Example: aluminum, hydrogen, carbon, calcium, nitrogen, silver, gold, mercury • They each have a one or two letter symbol • O=oxygen • C=carbon • Fe=iron atom atom • Basic particle from which all elements are made molecule molecule • A group of two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds compound • A substance made of two or more elements • When they combine, they form compounds with properties different from the elements. • Example: C12H22011=table sugar It has 12 atoms of carbon, 22 atoms of hydrogen, and 11 atoms of oxygen Carbon is black but sugar is not Oxygen is a gas but sugar is not Potential energy Potential energy • Energy of an object because of its position Kinetic energy Kinetic energy • Energy of an object in motion