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MATTER AND CHANGES Chapter 2 Matter: An Introduction • Matter has different properties that allow us to distinguish different types of matter. • Matter can undergo physical and/or chemical changes. • The components of compounds and mixtures can be separated; elements cannot. • Chemical and physical changes occur with a preservation of mass. Remember Matter & Chemistry? Chemistry The study of the composition of matter and the changes that matter undergoes. Matter Anything that has mass and occupies space. Describing Matter Matter has mass and volume. Extensive Properties: A property that depends on the amount of matter in a sample. Size dependency. Intensive Properties: A property that depends upon the type of matter in a sample, not the amount of matter. Independent of size. What is a substance? Matter that has a uniform and definite composition. Every sample of a given substance has identical intensive properties because every sample has the same composition. Substances can be elements like: Sodium (Na) Bromine (Br) Mercury (Hg) Elements are the simplest form of matter that has a unique set of properties. Elements are pure substances made up of only one kind of atom. Or substances can be compounds like: Water Rust Compounds are substances that contain two or more elements chemically combined in a fixed proportion. Compounds NaHCO3 Baking Soda sucrose C12H22O11 Name these everyday compounds from their formula. Can we break these down? H2O water Symbols and Formulas Chemical symbols are used to represent elements. Often elements are single letters or two letters. N = nitrogen, Na = sodium, etc. Chemical formulas are used to represent compounds. Formulas are always multiple letters combined with numbers. H2O = water, C12H22O11 = sucrose, etc. Identifying a Substance Physical Change vs. Chemical Change Boiling of Water Electrolysis of Water How to ID a substance? Answer #1: Use its physical properties. A quality or condition of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the substance’s composition. Examples: Hardness, color, conductivity, melting or boiling points, physical state at room temperature & malleability. Physical Properties of Some Substances Substance State Color Melting Point (oC) Boiling Point (oC) Chlorine Gas Greenishyellow -101 -34 Oxygen Gas Colorless -218 -183 Ethanol Liquid Colorless -117 78 Mercury Liquid Silvery-white -39 357 Sulfur Solid Yellow 115 445 Copper Solid Reddish-yellow 1084 2562 States of Matter LIQUID GAS SOLID Solids A form of matter that has a definite shape and form. • Particles are packed tightly together. • Virtually incompressible. • Only slightly expands with heat. Liquids A form of matter that has an indefinite shape, flows, yet has a fixed volume. • Particles are not arranged rigidly • Particles are in close contact with each other. • Free flowing • Volume does not change as shape of container changes; volume is fixed. • Almost incompressible • Expands slightly when heated Gas A form of matter that takes both the shape and volume of its container. • Great distances and no interactions between particles. • Easily compressible • Have indefinite shape and volume • Free flowing Gas vs. Vapor Gas: Term used for substances that exists in the gaseous state at room temperature. Vapor: Term used for the gaseous state of a substance that is usually a liquid or a solid at room temperature. Physical Changes During the course of a physical change the properties of a material change, but the composition of the material does not change. • Physical changes can be reversible or irreversible. Reversible Changes Irreversible Changes • Boiling • Break • Freezing • Split • Melting • Grind • Condensation • Cut • Crush Reversible changes involve a change in the physical state. How to ID a substance? Answer #2: Induce a chemical change. A change that produces matter with a different composition than the original matter. Example: Decomposing water to hydrogen gas and oxygen gas. Each product will have different properties from the reactant. Chemical Changes During a chemical change the composition of matter always changes. The chemical properties of a substance can be observed only when it undergoes a chemical change. Chemical Property: The ability of a substance to undergo a specific chemical change. Chemical Change = Chemical Reaction Reactant: The substances present at the start of the chemical reaction. Product: The substances present at the completion of the chemical reaction. The reactant is not the same as the product. Combustion of sugar The reaction of zinc and hydrochloric acid The reaction of iron with sulfur Recognizing Chemical Changes 1.) Production of a gas. 2.) Transfer of energy. 3.) Formation of a precipitate or a color change Conservation of Mass During a chemical reaction, the mass of the products is always equal to the mass of the reactants. Law of Conservation of Mass: In any physical or chemical change, mass is conserved. Mass Changes in Physical and Chemical Changes Mass in physical changes. Weigh mass before and after change. Mass before and after is always the same. Mass in chemical changes. Weigh reactants and products. Mass of reactants and products should also be the same, but not always. Why? Mixtures Mixtures are physical blends of two or more components each of which retains its own properties/identities. Most samples of matter are mixtures. Two categories of mixtures: heterogeneous and homogeneous. Heterogeneous Mixture This is a mixture in which the composition is not uniform throughout. Homogeneous Mixture This is a mixture that has uniform composition throughout. The Phases of the Mixtures Phase: any part of a sample with uniform composition and properties. Vinegar Homogeneous Mixtures = one phase Oil & Vinegar Heterogeneous Mixtures = Two or more phases Separating Mixtures Use differences in physical properties to separate the components of a mixture. Filtration: Process that separates a solid from a liquid (making coffee). Distillation: Process that separates a liquid from a liquid or liquids from solids dissolved in them. (distilled water). Examples of Distillation Devices Examples of Filtration Devices Distinguishing Substances and Mixtures Use the general characteristics of each to distinguish a mixture from a substance. This is the harder way to go. Fixed composition = Substance Varied composition = Mixture We can physically separate mixtures into their component parts. We cannot do so with substances. MATTER AND CHANGES Chapter 2 The End