Download - Chapter 12
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Chapter 12
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Do Now
• Use our mixture of salt, pepper, and iron, and marbles to come up with a definition for mixtures.
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MIXTURES
• A mixture is a physical combination of materials that can be separated by physical means.– Elements and compounds are mixed together but
are not bonded together. The different materials keep their own properties. Therefore, they can be separated if you know their different properties.
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Our Mixture• Page 358
• Salt– Dissolves in water
• Pepper– Does not dissolve in water. Floats on water.
• Iron Filings– Attracted to magnets
• Marbles– Large, and easy to pick up
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DO NOW• 1. Think of common everyday mixtures. List a
few.• 2. If you pour salt into water or sugar into
water, and then stir it up, where does it go?• 3. How is salt in water and the sugar in water
different than the mixture we used in class?
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When you stir sugar into water…
• It breaks apart and dissolves and spreads out throughout the water.
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Solutions
• A solution is a special mixture in which the substances are spread out evenly and will not settle. – Solute = the substance that dissolves– Solvent = the substance that does the dissolving
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“You” climb in a “vent”
The solUte goes into the solVENT
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In the sugar water solution, what is the SOLUTE?
Sugar
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In the Sugar water solution, what is the solvent?
Water
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How can you make a solute dissolve faster?
• Stir or heat the solution or use smaller pieces.
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Lots of things dissolve in water.
Therefore, WATER is called the Universal Solvent.
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Types of Solutions
• 1. Solid in liquid• EX: Salt water, sugar water
• 2. Liquid in liquid• EX: water and lemon juice
• 3. Gas in liquid• EX: carbon dioxide in water (seltzer)
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Solubility
Solubility describes the amount of a substance that will dissolve in a particular solvent at a given temperature.
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Solutions can be described as:• 1. Saturated
• Contains all the solute that can be dissolved. If you add more solute, it won’t dissolve.
• 2. Concentrated• Contains so much solute that it is close to being
saturated
• 3. Dilute.• Far from being saturated
Dilute - Concentrated Saturated
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How to “dilute” something
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Remember: • All substances have properties that
we can use to identify them. For example we can identify a person by their face, their voice, height, finger prints, DNA etc.. The more of these properties that we can identify, the better we know the person.
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• In a similar way, matter has properties - and there are many of them. There are two basic types of properties that we can associate with matter. These properties are called Physical properties and Chemical properties:
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Types of Properties of Matter
• 1. Physical Properties • Readily observable• Can be measured without changing the material
• 2. Chemical Properties• Only observable during a chemical reaction• Describe how a material changes into other materials
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•PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
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Physical Property Examples– Color– odor– mass– Volume– texture– Hardness– Appearance– melting point– boiling point– density– solubility
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Boiling Point• The point at which a liquid becomes a gas.
If you add HEAT, the molecules have more energy and escape as a gas.
http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/liquids/boil.html
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The opposite of boiling• Condensing. It’s the point at which a gas
becomes a liquid.
Water vapor (gas) comes into contact with a surface (usually cool) and returns to its liquid form.
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Melting Point• The point at which a solid becomes a liquid.When you add heat, the molecules speed up and spread out and change from their rigid solid position to a liquid.
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The opposite of melting• Freezing The point at which a liquid
becomes a solid
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Solubility Dissolving
Substances that dissolve in water are called water - SOLUBLE.
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Solubility Not Dissolving
Substances that do NOT dissolve in water are called water INSOLUBLE.
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•CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
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Chemical Property Examples• Combustibility • the ability to react with oxygen• sensitivity to light • acidity / basic• radioactivity• Reactivity with water
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Combustibility
• How easily a substance will light on fire.
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Sensitivity to light
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Radioactivity
Atoms become very unstable and a material becomes hazardous.
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How are Chemical Properties useful?
See page 382
• mixtures from one another• fossils from rock• metals from ores• elements from solutions
They can be used to separate:
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How else are Chemical Properties Useful?
• To identify substances– Ex: Acids and bases are 2 common types of
substances that react with other materials. – Acids• substances like vinegar and lemon juice• Turn blue litmus paper red
– Bases • substances like household cleaners• Turn red litmus paper blue
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Object Properties vs Material Properties
• A Bar of Gold –
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Do Now• Yesterday in our lab, we saw matter change in
2 different ways. • What is the difference between the way
matter changes in these situations:– tearing paper in half vs. burning it?– Mixing together sugar, flour , and eggs, and other
ingredients VS putting that whole mixture into the oven and baking it to make a cake.
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Make 2 columns in your notebook
• Title the first column “Physical Changes”• Title the second column
“Chemical Changes”
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Study Jams!
• http://studyjams.scholastic.com/studyjams/jams/science/matter/changes-of-matter.htm
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Changes in Matter1. Physical Change• Does NOT result in
production of a new substance
2. Chemical Change• DOES result in
production of a new substance.
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• Physical Change–Matter does
not lose its identify
• Chemical Changes- Change into a
completely different
kind of matter with different
properties
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Evidence of a Physical Change
• Change in • position, • size, • shape, • volume, • state of matter• warming or cooling by refrigeration
or heater
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Evidence of a Chemical Change
• Atoms rearrange to form new kinds of matter• Change in color• Formation of gas • Formation of a solid• Bubbles (not from boiling)• Fizzing• Change in temperature without refrigeration or
heater• New odor• Burning• cooking
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Chemical Changes- Example:
- Combine baking soda and vinegar
Physical Changes- Example:
- Tear a piece of paper into tiny pieces.
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Lets Play…………….
Name that Change.
http://blogs.canby.k12.or.us/uploads/harmss/Chem%20And%20Phys%20Props_Changes.pdf
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Physical Changes• If you melt an ice cube, it’s still H2O.• If you break a bottle, it’s still glass.• If you paint a piece of wood, it’s still wood.• EX: melting, freezing, condensing, breaking,
crushing, cutting, bending