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Science 9 – Matter and Chemical Change A Brief Unit Review Topic 1 – Exploring Matter • Particle Model of Matter – All matter is made up of tiny particles that are always moving. More energy, more movement. In a pure substance the particles are the same. Particles have attractive forces between them. Particles have spaces between them. • States of Matter • Classification of Matter – Matter Pure Substace Elements or Compounds L> Mixtures Homogeneous (solution) or Heterogeneous Topic 2 – Changes in Matter • Physical Changes – The particles stay the same but their physical appearance may have changed. – Can be reversed easily. – Example: Change in State or Dissolving Topic 2 – Changes in Matter • Chemical Change – Difficult/Impossible to reverse – A reaction – New products are formed (bubbles, precipitate, new odor) – Other evidence: Colour change, release of heat (exothermic), heat is absorbed (endothermic). – Example: Combustion, acid-base neutralization. Topic 2: Changes in Matter • Physical Properties of Matter – color, texture, lustre, smell, state, melting point, boiling point, hardness, malleability, ductility, crystal shape, viscosity, solubility, density and conductivity (electrical and heat). • Chemical Properties of Matter – reaction with water/air/acids/heat, ability to burn (combustibility), toxicity, stability. Topic 3: Elements • Law of Conservation of Mass – In a chem. rxn, mass of the products = mass of the reactants • Law of Definite Composition – In compounds, atoms arrange themselves in defined ratios. For example in water, there are 2 hydrogen atoms for every oxygen atom. • Atomic Theory (Dalton) – All matter is made up of atoms – Atoms cannot be created/destroyed/divided into smaller particles. – Atoms of the same element are identical in size and mass. Different elements have different sized atoms. – Atoms combine to form compounds. Topic 3 - Elements • Atomic Models – Raisin Bun/Plum Pudding Model (Thompson) – Planetary Model (Rutherford) – Atomic Model (Bohr) – Electron-Cloud/Quantum Model Topic 4 & 5 – The Periodic Table of Elements Topic 4 & 5 – The Periodic Table • Mendeleev assembled the periodic table by increasing atomic mass. • Each element has an atomic number. This is the # of protons an element has in its nucleus. • Each element as a symbol, eg. A for Argon • Each element has a mass number. This is the # of protons and neutrons it has. Topic 6 - Compounds • Ionic Compounds – Metal + Non metal. – Each atom becomes an ion (charged particle) in solution. – Therefore they are conductive when liquid/aqueous. – Very soluble in water. – Solids at room temp. – Example: NaCl Topic 6 - Compounds • Molecular Compounds – Non-metal + Non-metal – Non conductive in solution – Example: • H2O • O2 (diatomic molecule) • CO2 Topic 6 - Compounds • Naming Compounds – Write the name of the first element. – Write the name of the second element, but change the ending to -ide. For example, oxygen becomes oxide, fluorine becomes fluoride. – IF YOUR COMPOUND IS IONIC, you’re done! – IF YOUR COMPOUND IS MOLECULAR, add a prefix (mono, di, tri, tetra) to each atom to indicate the quantity. – Example: H2O • Dihydrogen monoxide Topic 7 – Chemical Reactions • Reactants Products • Bonds break (releases energy) and reform (uses energy). • Exothermic rxns give off extra energy, as heat. • Endothermic rxns absorb energy (gets cooler) Topic 8 – Reaction Rate • Catalysts increase the rate of reaction. A common example are enzymes in your digestive system. • Inhibitors slow down reactions. • Corrosion is the oxidation of metals (ex. Rust: iron + oxygen iron oxide/rust). To prevent corrosion, we plate our metals (galvanization is zinc plating). • Combustion: Fuel + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy