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Classification of Matter
Substances
• Matter that is either an element or a compound
• Elements and compounds can not be reduced to
more basic components by physical means
Elements
• All units that make up all
matter are called atoms
• If all the atoms in a
sample of matter have the
same identity, that kind of
matter is an element
• The carbon in a pencil
point contains only carbon
atoms, carbon is an
element
Compounds
• Compounds are material
made of two or more
elements combined
• The ratio of the different
atoms is always the same
for that compound
• Example: Waters ratio is
H2O, so in each water
molecule there are two
hydrogen atoms and one
oxygen atom
Element or Compound
Gold
Element
Au
Element or Compound
Salt
Compound
NaCl (sodium chloride)
Element or Compound
Copper
Element
Cu
Element or Compound
Baking soda
Compound
NaHCO3 (sodium bicarbonate)
Element or Compound
Propane
Compound
C3H8
Mixtures
• A mixture is a material
that is made up of two
or more substances
• Do not always contain
the same amounts of
substances that make
them up
• A heterogeneous mixture
is a mixture in which the
different materials can
easily be distinguished
• A homogenous mixture or
solution is a mixture in
which two or more
substances are uniformly
spread out and the
different materials can not
be easily distinguished
MATTER
Element
One kind of atom
Compound
Two or more
kinds of atoms
Substance
Composition definite
Homogeneous
Evenly mixed;
a solution
Heterogeneous
Unevenly
mixed
Mixture
Composition variable
Matter
Has mass
Takes up space
Colloids and Suspensions
• A colloid is a
heterogeneous mixture
containing tiny particles
that never settle out.
Example : milk and jello
• A suspension is a
heterogeneous mixture
containing a liquid in
which visible particles
settle. Example: Muddy
water
• One way to distinguish a colloid from a
solution is by its appearance.
Detecting Colloids
• Fog appears white because its particles are
large enough to scatter light.
• Sometimes it is not so obvious that a liquid
is a colloid.
• You can tell for certain if a liquid is a colloid
by passing a beam of light through it.
• A light beam is invisible as it passes through
a solution, but can be seen readily as it passes
through a colloid. This occurs because the
particles in the colloid are large enough to
scatter light, but those in the solution are not.
Detecting Colloids
• This scattering of
light by colloidal
particles is called
the Tyndall
effect.
• Some mixtures are neither solutions nor
colloids. One example is muddy pond
water.
Suspensions
• Pond water is a suspension, which is a
heterogeneous mixture containing a liquid
in which visible particles settle.
Suspensions
• The table summarizes the properties of
different types of mixtures.
A. colloid
B. mixture
C. substance
D. solution
A _______ is a type of matter with a fixed
composition.
Question 1
The answer is C. A substance can be either
an element or a compound.
Answer
A. 5
B. 10
C. 30
D. 90
How many elements are found on Earth?
Question 2
The answer is D. About 90 elements are
found on Earth, and more than 20 have been
made in laboratories.
Answer
How are compounds different from mixtures?
Question 3
The atoms in compounds are combined in
fixed proportions and cannot be separated by
physical means. A mixture is made of two
or more substances that can be easily
separated by physical means.
Answer
Physical Properties
• A physical property is a
characteristic of a material
that you can observe with
out changing the
substances that make up
the material
• Physical properties can be
used to separate mixtures
• Examples of physical
properties include: color,
shape, size, density,
melting point, and boiling
point
Appearance
• How would you describe a tennis ball? You
could begin by describing its shape, color,
and state of matter.
• You can measure
some physical
properties, too. For
instance, you could
measure the diameter
of the ball.
Behavior
• Some physical properties describe the
behavior of a material or a substance.
• Attraction to a magnet is a physical property
of the substance iron.
• Every substance
has a specific
combination of
physical properties
that make it useful
for certain tasks.
Using Physical Properties to
Separate
• The best way to separate substances depends
on their physical properties.
• Size is one physical property often used to
separate substances.
Using Physical Properties to
Separate
• Look at the mixture of iron filings and sand
shown.
• You probably won’t be
able to sift out the iron
filings because they are
similar in size to the sand
particles. What you can
do is pass a magnet
through the mixture.
Using Physical Properties to
Separate
• The magnet attracts only
the iron filings and pulls
them from the sand.
This is an example of
how a physical property,
such as magnetic
attraction, can be used to
separate substances in a
mixture.
Physical Change
The Identity Remains the
Same
• These changes might involve energy changes,
but the kind of substance—the identity of the
element or compound—does not change.
Physical Change
• A physical change is a
change in size, shape, or
state of matter
• Physical changes do not
change the identities of the
substances of the material
• Physical changes can be
used to separate mixtures
• Physical changes can
sometimes be reversed
• Examples of physical
changes include phase
changes
• Iron is a substance that can change states if it
absorbs or releases enough energy—at high
temperatures, it melts.
The Identity Remains the
Same
• Color changes can
accompany a
physical change, too.
The Identity Remains the
Same
• For example, when
iron is heated it first
glows red. Then, if
it is heated to a
higher temperature,
it turns white.
Chemical Changes
• A change of one substance
in a material to a different
substance is a chemical
change
• Examples: When iron is
exposed to oxygen and
water in the air the iron
and oxygen form rust,
baking a cake
• Chemical Changes usually
can not be reversed
Chemical Change
• When a substance goes
through a chemical change
it may change the physical
and chemical properties of
the substance
• Sodium is a soft, metallic
(physical characteristic)
element that explodes
when exposed to any
moisture (chemical
characteristic)
• Chlorine is a deadly
(chemical
characteristic) green
(physical
characteristic) gas
(used in WWI)
• When combine
chemically they create
sodium chloride (table
salt)
• Clues such as heat, cooling, or the formation
of bubbles or solids in a liquid are helpful
indicators that a reaction is taking place.
The Identity Changes
• However, the only sure proof is that a new
substance is produced.
• The only clue that iron has changed into a
new substance is the presence of rust.
• Burning and rusting are chemical changes
because new substances form.
Using Chemical Change to Separate
• One case where you might separate
substances using a chemical change is in
cleaning tarnished silver.
• Tarnish is a chemical reaction between
silver metal and sulfur compounds in the air
which results in silver sulfide.
• It can be changed back into silver using a
chemical reaction.
• You don’t usually separate substances using
chemical changes in the home.
Using Chemical Change to
Separate
• In industry and chemical laboratories,
however, this kind of separation is common.
For example, many metals are separated from
their ores and then purified using chemical
changes.
Chemical Properties
• A characteristic of a
substance that
indicates whether it
can undergo a certain
chemical change
• Examples are
flammability, and
reacting with sunlight
• The forces of nature continuously shape
Earth’s surface. Rocks split, deep canyons
are carved out, sand dunes shift, and curious
limestone formations decorate caves.
Weathering—Chemical or
Physical Change?
• Do you think these changes, often referred to
as weathering, are physical or chemical? The
answer is both.
• Large rocks can split when water seeps into
small cracks, freezes, and expands.
Physical
• However, the smaller pieces of newly
exposed rock still have the same properties
as the original sample.
• This is a physical change.
• Solid calcium carbonate, a compound found
in limestone, does not dissolve easily in
water.
Chemical
• However, when the water is even slightly
acidic, as it is when it contains some
dissolved carbon dioxide, calcium carbonate
reacts.
• It changes into a new substance, calcium
hydrogen carbonate, which does dissolve in
water.
• A similar
chemical change
produces caves
and the icicle
shaped rock
formations that
often are found
in them.
Chemical
Conservation of Mass
• The mass of all
substances present
before a chemical
change equals the
mass of the substances
after the chemical
change
• Suppose you
burn a large log
until nothing is
left but a small
pile of ashes.
The Conservation of Mass
• At first, you might think that matter was lost
during this change because the pile of ashes
looks much smaller than the log did.
The Conservation of Mass
• In fact, the mass
of the ashes is less
than that of the
log.
• However, suppose that you could collect all
the oxygen in the air that was combined with
the log during the burning and all the smoke
and gases that escaped from the burning log
and measure their masses, too.
The Conservation of Mass
• Then you would find that no mass was lost
after all.
Section Check
A. boiling point
B. density
C. flammability
D. melting point
Which of the following is a chemical
property?
2
Question 1
Section Check
The answer is C. Flammability indicates
whether a substance will undergo the
chemical change of burning.
2
Answer
Section Check
A characteristic of a material that can be
observed without changing the identity of
the substances that make up the material is a
_______.
2
Question 2
Section Check
The answer is physical property. Examples
of physical properties include color, shape,
and density.
2
Answer
Section Check
What is the law of conservation of mass?
2
Question 3
Section Check
According to the law of conservation of
mass, the mass of all substances that are
present before a chemical change equals the
mass of all substances that remain after the
change.
2
Answer
Classification_of_Matter.ppt

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Classification_of_Matter.ppt

  • 2. Substances • Matter that is either an element or a compound • Elements and compounds can not be reduced to more basic components by physical means
  • 3. Elements • All units that make up all matter are called atoms • If all the atoms in a sample of matter have the same identity, that kind of matter is an element • The carbon in a pencil point contains only carbon atoms, carbon is an element
  • 4. Compounds • Compounds are material made of two or more elements combined • The ratio of the different atoms is always the same for that compound • Example: Waters ratio is H2O, so in each water molecule there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom
  • 8. Element or Compound Baking soda Compound NaHCO3 (sodium bicarbonate)
  • 10. Mixtures • A mixture is a material that is made up of two or more substances • Do not always contain the same amounts of substances that make them up • A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture in which the different materials can easily be distinguished • A homogenous mixture or solution is a mixture in which two or more substances are uniformly spread out and the different materials can not be easily distinguished
  • 11. MATTER Element One kind of atom Compound Two or more kinds of atoms Substance Composition definite Homogeneous Evenly mixed; a solution Heterogeneous Unevenly mixed Mixture Composition variable Matter Has mass Takes up space
  • 12. Colloids and Suspensions • A colloid is a heterogeneous mixture containing tiny particles that never settle out. Example : milk and jello • A suspension is a heterogeneous mixture containing a liquid in which visible particles settle. Example: Muddy water
  • 13. • One way to distinguish a colloid from a solution is by its appearance. Detecting Colloids • Fog appears white because its particles are large enough to scatter light. • Sometimes it is not so obvious that a liquid is a colloid. • You can tell for certain if a liquid is a colloid by passing a beam of light through it.
  • 14. • A light beam is invisible as it passes through a solution, but can be seen readily as it passes through a colloid. This occurs because the particles in the colloid are large enough to scatter light, but those in the solution are not. Detecting Colloids • This scattering of light by colloidal particles is called the Tyndall effect.
  • 15. • Some mixtures are neither solutions nor colloids. One example is muddy pond water. Suspensions • Pond water is a suspension, which is a heterogeneous mixture containing a liquid in which visible particles settle.
  • 16. Suspensions • The table summarizes the properties of different types of mixtures.
  • 17. A. colloid B. mixture C. substance D. solution A _______ is a type of matter with a fixed composition. Question 1
  • 18. The answer is C. A substance can be either an element or a compound. Answer
  • 19. A. 5 B. 10 C. 30 D. 90 How many elements are found on Earth? Question 2
  • 20. The answer is D. About 90 elements are found on Earth, and more than 20 have been made in laboratories. Answer
  • 21. How are compounds different from mixtures? Question 3
  • 22. The atoms in compounds are combined in fixed proportions and cannot be separated by physical means. A mixture is made of two or more substances that can be easily separated by physical means. Answer
  • 23. Physical Properties • A physical property is a characteristic of a material that you can observe with out changing the substances that make up the material • Physical properties can be used to separate mixtures • Examples of physical properties include: color, shape, size, density, melting point, and boiling point
  • 24. Appearance • How would you describe a tennis ball? You could begin by describing its shape, color, and state of matter. • You can measure some physical properties, too. For instance, you could measure the diameter of the ball.
  • 25. Behavior • Some physical properties describe the behavior of a material or a substance. • Attraction to a magnet is a physical property of the substance iron. • Every substance has a specific combination of physical properties that make it useful for certain tasks.
  • 26. Using Physical Properties to Separate • The best way to separate substances depends on their physical properties. • Size is one physical property often used to separate substances.
  • 27. Using Physical Properties to Separate • Look at the mixture of iron filings and sand shown. • You probably won’t be able to sift out the iron filings because they are similar in size to the sand particles. What you can do is pass a magnet through the mixture.
  • 28. Using Physical Properties to Separate • The magnet attracts only the iron filings and pulls them from the sand. This is an example of how a physical property, such as magnetic attraction, can be used to separate substances in a mixture.
  • 29. Physical Change The Identity Remains the Same • These changes might involve energy changes, but the kind of substance—the identity of the element or compound—does not change.
  • 30. Physical Change • A physical change is a change in size, shape, or state of matter • Physical changes do not change the identities of the substances of the material • Physical changes can be used to separate mixtures • Physical changes can sometimes be reversed • Examples of physical changes include phase changes
  • 31. • Iron is a substance that can change states if it absorbs or releases enough energy—at high temperatures, it melts. The Identity Remains the Same • Color changes can accompany a physical change, too.
  • 32. The Identity Remains the Same • For example, when iron is heated it first glows red. Then, if it is heated to a higher temperature, it turns white.
  • 33. Chemical Changes • A change of one substance in a material to a different substance is a chemical change • Examples: When iron is exposed to oxygen and water in the air the iron and oxygen form rust, baking a cake • Chemical Changes usually can not be reversed
  • 34. Chemical Change • When a substance goes through a chemical change it may change the physical and chemical properties of the substance • Sodium is a soft, metallic (physical characteristic) element that explodes when exposed to any moisture (chemical characteristic) • Chlorine is a deadly (chemical characteristic) green (physical characteristic) gas (used in WWI) • When combine chemically they create sodium chloride (table salt)
  • 35.
  • 36. • Clues such as heat, cooling, or the formation of bubbles or solids in a liquid are helpful indicators that a reaction is taking place. The Identity Changes • However, the only sure proof is that a new substance is produced. • The only clue that iron has changed into a new substance is the presence of rust. • Burning and rusting are chemical changes because new substances form.
  • 37. Using Chemical Change to Separate • One case where you might separate substances using a chemical change is in cleaning tarnished silver. • Tarnish is a chemical reaction between silver metal and sulfur compounds in the air which results in silver sulfide. • It can be changed back into silver using a chemical reaction.
  • 38. • You don’t usually separate substances using chemical changes in the home. Using Chemical Change to Separate • In industry and chemical laboratories, however, this kind of separation is common. For example, many metals are separated from their ores and then purified using chemical changes.
  • 39. Chemical Properties • A characteristic of a substance that indicates whether it can undergo a certain chemical change • Examples are flammability, and reacting with sunlight
  • 40. • The forces of nature continuously shape Earth’s surface. Rocks split, deep canyons are carved out, sand dunes shift, and curious limestone formations decorate caves. Weathering—Chemical or Physical Change? • Do you think these changes, often referred to as weathering, are physical or chemical? The answer is both.
  • 41. • Large rocks can split when water seeps into small cracks, freezes, and expands. Physical • However, the smaller pieces of newly exposed rock still have the same properties as the original sample. • This is a physical change.
  • 42. • Solid calcium carbonate, a compound found in limestone, does not dissolve easily in water. Chemical • However, when the water is even slightly acidic, as it is when it contains some dissolved carbon dioxide, calcium carbonate reacts. • It changes into a new substance, calcium hydrogen carbonate, which does dissolve in water.
  • 43.
  • 44. • A similar chemical change produces caves and the icicle shaped rock formations that often are found in them. Chemical
  • 45.
  • 46. Conservation of Mass • The mass of all substances present before a chemical change equals the mass of the substances after the chemical change
  • 47. • Suppose you burn a large log until nothing is left but a small pile of ashes. The Conservation of Mass • At first, you might think that matter was lost during this change because the pile of ashes looks much smaller than the log did.
  • 48. The Conservation of Mass • In fact, the mass of the ashes is less than that of the log.
  • 49. • However, suppose that you could collect all the oxygen in the air that was combined with the log during the burning and all the smoke and gases that escaped from the burning log and measure their masses, too. The Conservation of Mass • Then you would find that no mass was lost after all.
  • 50. Section Check A. boiling point B. density C. flammability D. melting point Which of the following is a chemical property? 2 Question 1
  • 51. Section Check The answer is C. Flammability indicates whether a substance will undergo the chemical change of burning. 2 Answer
  • 52. Section Check A characteristic of a material that can be observed without changing the identity of the substances that make up the material is a _______. 2 Question 2
  • 53. Section Check The answer is physical property. Examples of physical properties include color, shape, and density. 2 Answer
  • 54. Section Check What is the law of conservation of mass? 2 Question 3
  • 55.
  • 56. Section Check According to the law of conservation of mass, the mass of all substances that are present before a chemical change equals the mass of all substances that remain after the change. 2 Answer