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Matter And Energy Chemistry I: Chapter 2a Chemistry I Honors: Chapter 2 ICP: Chapter 15 & 16a SAVE PAPER AND INK!!! When you print out the notes on PowerPoint, print "Handouts" instead of "Slides" in the print setup. Also, turn off the backgrounds (Tools>Options>Print>UNcheck "Background Printing")! The Nature of Matter Gold Mercury Chemists are interested in the nature of matter and how this is related to its atoms and molecules. Chemistry & Matter • We can explore the MACROSCOPIC world — what we can see — • to understand the PARTICULATE worlds we cannot see. • We write SYMBOLS to describe these worlds. A Chemist’s View of Water Macroscopic H 2O (gas, liquid, solid) Particulate Symbolic A Chemist’s View Macroscopic Particulate 2 H2(g) + O2 (g) --> 2 H2O(g) Symbolic Kinetic Nature of Matter Matter consists of atoms and molecules in _____. STATES OF MATTER • _______ — have rigid shape, fixed volume. External shape can reflect the atomic and molecular arrangement. –Reasonably well understood. • _______ — have no fixed shape and may not fill a container completely. –Not well understood. • _______ — expand to fill their container. –Good theoretical understanding. OTHER STATES OF MATTER • PLASMA — an electrically charged gas; Example: the sun or any other star • BOSE-EINSTEIN CONDENSATE — a condensate that forms near absolute zero that has superconductive properties; Example: supercooled Rb gas Physical Properties What are some physical properties? • color • melting and boiling point • Odor • Anything you can touch, see, hear, taste… Extensive vs. intensive property • Extensive properties are dependent upon the amount of substance present. Ex- mass, length • Intensive property is independent of the amount of substance present. Ex- density, temperature Graphite — layer structure of carbon atoms reflects physical properties. Physical Changes – can be observed without changing the identity of the substance Some physical changes would be • boiling of a liquid • melting of a solid • dissolving a solid in a liquid to give a homogeneous mixture — a SOLUTION. Chemical Properties and Chemical Change •Burning hydrogen (H2) in oxygen (O2) gives H2O. • Chemical change or chemical reaction — transformation of one or more atoms or molecules into one or more different molecules. Sure Signs of a Chemical Change • Heat • Light • Gas Produced (not from boiling!) • Precipitate – a solid formed by mixing two liquids together • Law of conservation of mass- Matter is neither created nor destroyed during a chemical reaction. Physical vs. Chemical • Examples: – melting point physical – flammable chemical – density physical – magnetic physical – tarnishes in air chemical Physical vs. Chemical • Examples: – rusting iron – dissolving in water – burning a log – melting ice – grinding spices Matter Flowchart MATTER yes MIXTURE yes Is the composition uniform? Homogeneous Mixture (solution) PURE SUBSTANCE no Heterogeneous Mixture Colloids no Can it be physically separated? yes Can it be chemically decomposed? Compound Suspensions no Element Types of Mixtures • Variable combination of 2 or more pure substances. Heterogeneous – visibly separate phases Homogeneous – Same throughout Methods of separation • Filtration- use filter paper to separate based on particle size • Distillation- boil off liquids at different temperatures • Crystallization- separate based on formation of crystals • Sublimation- solids going directly to gases.opposite- deposition. • Chromatography- liquids rise up in a column based on affinity • Do Chromatography lab Practice 1. Which of the following is NOT matter? (1) a chair (2) air (3) light (4) water 2. Which of the following is NOT a property of matter? (1) inertia (2)occupies space (3) composed of elements (4) weightlessness 3. Which of the following may be heterogeneous? (1) elements only (2) compounds only (3) mixtures only (4) elements and compounds 4. Which of the following is pure? (1) elements only (2) compounds only (3) mixtures only (4) elements and compounds 5. Which of the following consists of more than one substance? (1) elements only (2) compounds only (3) mixtures only • (4) elements and compounds Practice (contd). 6. Which of the following are types of matter? (1) elements only (2) compounds only (3) mixtures only (4) all of these 7. Which of the following is a type of mixture? (1) elements only(2) compounds only (3) solutions only (4) elements and Compounds 8. Which of the following is NOT composed of two or more types of atoms? (1) element (2) compound (3) solution (4) mechanical mixture 9. Which represents a homogeneous mixture? (1) CuSO4(s) (2) NaCl(aq) (3) Br2(R) (4) CO2(g) 10. Which substance can be decomposed by a chemical change? (1) ammonia (2) iron (3) argon (4) helium Elements and compounds • Elements- simplest form of matter • Compounds formed by combining elements in a fixed ratio. • Periodic table- organizes elements into groups (families) and periods. • Groups are vertical and periods are horizontal • Law of definite proportions- Any compound is always composed of same elements in same proportion. • Ex- CuF2= 1 Cu 2F • Percent by mass=mass of element/ mass of compound x100. • P88 Practice problems- q19-22 Law of multiple proportions • Compounds can be formed in more than one way between two or more elements. • Elements can combine in different proportions with whole number ratios when this happens. • Ex- H2O and H2O2