unit 1, properties of matter. warm up an experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and...

77
Unit 1, Properties of Matter

Upload: claude-howard

Post on 11-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Unit 1, Properties of Matter

Page 2: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

• An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these safety items is primarily to protect againsta. release of hazardous gasesb. hot materials and spills of harmful liquidsc. contamination of chemicals and glasswared. staining of lab clothing

Page 3: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will. . .• Differentiate between the states of matter

based on their properties

Page 4: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• States of Matter Video• States of Matter Notes• States of Matter Puzzles• Ice Cube Melting Activity• Review Video• Critical Safety Questionnaire• Exit Slip

Page 5: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

States of Matter Guiding Question

• How are the physical properties of solids, liquids, and gases explained?

• States of Matter Video

Page 6: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Matter Defined

• Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space.

• Mass is the amount of matter in an object. Is air an example of matter? Why or why

not?

Page 7: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

States of matter• Matter is made up of particles that are in constant motion.• This constant motion gives the particles kinetic energy

(energy of movement)• The temperature of a substance is a measure of the average

kinetic energy of all the particles of the substance.• As these particles move, they attract, or pull, other particles

towards themselves.• The state of matter is determined by how fast the particles

move and how strongly attracted they are to one another.

Which state of matter has the most kinetic energy?

Page 8: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Solid

• Particles have low kinetic energy• Particles cannot flow (particles flow when they move past one another)• Solids have a definite shape and volume and are not compressible.

•A solid maintains its volume and shape because the particles in it are packed tightly and are held together by strong attractive forces.•Particles vibrate in relatively fixed positions Why are solids not compressible?

Page 9: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Liquid• Particles are relatively close

together, but have enough energy to move past one another (flow)

• Therefore, liquids take the shape of their container

• However, liquid still have a definite volume and are not compressible.

• Particles have more kinetic energy than those of solids, but less than those of gases

Are attractive forces greater in solids or in liquids?

Page 10: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Gas• Particles have high kinetic

energy—they move rapidly in all directions and are far apart

• A gas expands to fill its container, taking on the volume and the shape of the container

• Gases expand with an increase in temperature.• Gases are compressible

How could you shrink an inflated balloon?• Shrinking balloon video

Page 11: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Which state of matter is shown in each picture? How do you know?

Liquid Gas Solid

Page 12: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

States of Matter SummaryStates of Matter Summary

Solid

Liquid

Gas

Definite Volume?

YES

YES

NO

Definite Shape?

YES

NO

NO

Temp. increase

Small Expans.

Small Expans.

Large Expans.

Compressible?

NO

NO

YES

Page 13: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Ice Cube Melting Activity

• Obtain an ice cube, zip top bag, and timer from a teacher.

• Your task is to melt the ice cube in the shortest time possible.

What did you have to add to the ice cube to get it to melt faster? Write your thoughts on your warm up sheet.

Page 14: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

States of Matter Review Video

• YouTube Review Video

Page 15: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

1.As the temperature of a gas is increased, what happens to the kinetic energy of its molecules?2.Which state of matter has defined volume and shape and is not compressible?3.Which state of matter is compressible? Why is this?

Page 16: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

The same amount of hydrogen gas is in both containers. The pressure in container B is

a. ¼ the pressure in container A

b. ½ the pressure in container A

c. 2 times the pressure in container A

d. 4 times the pressure in container B

Page 17: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will. . .Describe the changes in energy and the arrangement of particles that take place during a change of state (phase change).

Page 18: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• States of Matter Venn Diagram• Review for Quiz• Quiz 1.1• Dry Ice Sublimation Demonstration• Changes of State Notes• Exit Slip

Page 19: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Changes of State Guiding Questions

• How does the arrangement of particles change during changes of state?

• How does energy transfer during changes of state?

Page 20: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Changes of State and Kinetic Energy

• Particles of matter have kinetic energy. The more kinetic energy a particle has, the faster and farther it moves.

• When matter changes state, energy is either absorbed or released, but chemical composition of the substance does not change.

• The temperature of a substance is the average kinetic energy of all the particles of the substance.

Is energy absorbed or released as a liquid changes to a gas?

Page 21: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Melting• Solid changes to liquid.• An increase in KE allows the

particles to vibrate so intensely that attractive forces are overcome and the particles can begin to move past one another (flow).

• Melting point: the temperature at which solid changes to liquid

When you melted the ice cube at the beginning of class, how did you get it to melt?

Page 22: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Freezing

• Liquid changes to solid• As a liquid substance cools and

loses energy, the particles slow down and get closer together.

• Eventually, the attraction between the particles overcomes their motion, and the substance becomes a solid.

• Freezing point: the temperature at which liquid changes to solid

Why don’t solids flow?

Page 23: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Vaporization• Liquid changes to gas• The particles of a liquid gain energy,

the motion of the particles increases, and temperature rises.

• When the particles of the liquid have enough energy to overcome attractive forces, the particles become free to spread apart.

• Boiling point: the temperature at which vaporization occurs throughout the liquid

How does vaporization differ from boiling?

Page 24: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Condensation• Gas changes to liquid• Occurs as a gas cools, releasing

thermal energy.• The particles slow down and when

the attractive forces pull them together, the gas becomes a liquid.

• The condensation point is the same as the boiling point of the substance.

• Example: clouds form from condensation

Why does a cold glass of water “sweat”?

Page 25: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Sublimation

• Solid changes to gas• The particles of the solid absorb

enough energy to go from being very tightly packed to being very far apart.

• Example: As a comet approaches the sun, some of the solids inside it change to gases, resulting in the visible “tail” of the comet.

What is another example of sublimation?

Page 26: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Solid Liquid Gas

Melt Evaporate

CondenseFreeze

Changes of State Summary

Page 27: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Solid Liquid

Gas

Atoms

Matter

Definite Shape

No definite volume

No definite shape

Particles slide past each other

Definite volume

Particles move quickly

Cannot flow

Particles tighly packed

Compressible

Not compressible

Particles can flow

Large expansion with temp. increase

Small expansion with temp. increase

Melting

Sublimation

Condensation

Evaporation Boiling

Freezing

Vaporization

Page 28: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

• Does water melt and freeze at the same temperature? How do you know?

Page 29: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

• We demonstrated dry ice changing state from solid to gas. The term for this type of change isa. vaporizationb. sublimationc. meltingd. evaporating

• Does water melt and freeze at the same temperature? How do you know?

Page 30: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will:• Analyze the phase change of water

Page 31: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• Go over Quiz 1.1• Definitions• Pre-lab Questions• Phase Change of Water Lab• Notes on Heating Curve of Water• Exit Slip

Page 32: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Heating Curve of Water Lab• Variable

– factors that affect the results of an experiment• Dependent Variable

– the variable in an experiment that changes in response to choices made by the experimenter

– this variable is plotted on the y-axis of a graph• Independent Variable

– the variable in an experiment that is manipulated by the experimenter

– causes changes in the dependent variable in the experiment

– this variable is plotted on the x-axis of a graph

Page 33: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Heating Curve of Water

Temperature does not change during changes of state. That is why the line is horizontal at those points on the curve.

Page 34: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

1. Why do you see a horizontal line (plateau) on your heating curve graphs when water is changing state?

2. Which state of water has the largest amount of kinetic energy?

a. liquidb. solidc. gasd. they all have the same amount

Page 35: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

• Explain why temperature does not change during a change of state.

Page 36: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will…• Analyze physical and chemical properties of

matter

Page 37: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• Review for Quiz• Quiz 1.2• Properties of Matter Notes• Properties of Matter Whiteboard Activity• Pre-lab Questions• Properties of Matter Lab• Exit Slips

Page 38: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Properties of Matter

All matter can be described through a combination of characteristics called properties

There are two categories of propertiesPhysicalChemical

Page 39: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Physical PropertiesCan be observed without

changing the substance itself

Describe the size, shape, appearance, amount, and physical attributes of the matter

Examples:Color, mass, volume, shape,

textureState of matter, melting point,

boiling point, density, conductivity, malleability, ductility

Explain why melting point is a physical property.

Page 40: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Chemical Properties

• Chemical properties can only be observed by changing the matter itself

• Examples – Reactivity (iron reacts with oxygen

to form rust)– Combustibility (hydrogen gas

burns easily)– Corrosiveness (sulfuric acid burns

skin)

Page 41: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Physical or Chemical?• Flammability

– Chemical

• Malleability– Physical

• Melting point– Physical (change of state)

• Ability to rust– Chemical

• Ability to tarnish– Chemical

Page 42: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

1. One chemical property of matter isa. boiling pointb. reactivityc. textured. density

Page 43: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

1. A physical property may be investigated bya. melting iceb. allowing silver to tarnishc. letting milk turn sourd. burning wood

2. Rust is formed on iron pipes after prolonged exposure to humid air. What type of change does this illustrate?

Page 44: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will…• Analyze the physical properties density and

viscosity, and determine density for substances

Page 45: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• Go over Quiz 1.2• Notes on Viscosity and Density• Notes on Density Calculations• Density Calculations Practice• Exit Slip

Page 46: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Viscosity

• Viscosity is defined as the resistance of a fluid to flow

• A substance that pours more slowly has a higher viscosity.

Give an example of a liquid that is more viscous than water.

Page 47: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

DensityPhysical property that

measures how tightly packed matter is

Density is a comparison of how much matter there is in a certain amount of space.

Directly related to the mass of matter and inversely related to the volume

Page 48: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Liquid Layers• If you pour together liquids that don’t

mix and have different densities, they will form layers in the order of their densities.

Imagine that the liquids have the following densities: – 10g/cm3. 3g/cm3.– 6g/cm3. 5g/cm3.

Which density value goes with each layer?

3 g/cm3

5 g/cm3

6 g/cm3

10 g/cm3

Page 49: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Try this problem: Densities of common substances at room temperature (g/cm3)

Water 1.00Aluminum 2.70Gold 19.3 Wood 0.6

Mercury is a liquid at room temperature with a density of 13.6g/cm3. Would a bar of aluminum float or sink in a pool of liquid mercury?

Float, because the density of aluminum is less than that of mercury.

Page 50: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Calculating Density

• Density = Mass Volume

• Units: g/mL or g/cm3

A block of wood has a mass of 400 g and a volume of 650 cm3. What is the density of the wood in g/cm3?

m = 400 g v = 650 cm3

D = m/vD = 400 g 650 cm3

D = 0.6 g/cm3

Page 51: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Calculating Density Lead has a density of 11.34 g/cm3. If a sample of lead has a

mass of 5.67 g, what is the volume of the sample?d = 11.34 g/cm3 m = 5.67 gD = m/v11.34 g/cm3 = 5.67 g V V = 5.67 g / 11.34 g/cm3

V = 0.5 cm3

Page 52: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

• The picture shows the results of pouring a blue liquid into a clear liquid and allowing the mixture to settle for 25 minutes. Compared to the clear liquid, the blue liquid is morea. massiveb. densec. viscousd. soluble

Page 53: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up1. What is the density of 12 mL of a liquid that has a mass of

4.05 grams?a. 0.338 g/mLb. 2.96 g/mLc. 16.1 g/mLd. 48.6 g/mL

2. What is the mass of a 500.00 mL sample of seawater with a density of 1.025 g/mL?a. 487.8 gb. 500.0 gc. 512.5 gd. 625.0 g

Page 54: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• Finish Density Practice• Review for Quiz• Quiz 1.3 (“Pre-Test”)• Density Column Lab• Exit Slip

Page 55: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

• What liquid was the bottom layer in your density column? Why was it the bottom layer?

Page 56: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will…• Analyze the physical property buoyancy

Page 57: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

• How do objects that are more dense than water float?

Page 58: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

1. Students in a chemistry lab measure the time it takes four different 100 mL solutions to pass through a hole in the bottom of the cup. Which of the following properties of the solutions is most likely being measured?

a. Buoyancyb. Massc. Viscosityd. Volume

2. How are density and viscosity related?

Page 59: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will…• Analyze the physical property buoyancy• Solidify your understanding of Unit 1 concepts

Page 60: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• Go over Quiz 1.3• Review for Unit 1 Test• Exit Slip

Page 61: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Buoyancy• Buoyancy is the upward

force fluids exert on objects.

• Archimedes Principle-The buoyant force is equal to the weight of the fluid the object displaces or takes the place of.

• An object will float if the water it displaces has a greater mass than the object's mass.

Page 62: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

• Which of the following objects will float on water? Why?a. b.

c. d.

Page 63: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Warm Up

• A block of maple wood with a volume of 405 cubic centimeters and a density of 0.67 g/cm3 is sawed in half. The density of the two smaller blocks is nowa. ¼ the original densityb. ½ the original densityc. 2 times the original densityd. the same as the original density

Page 64: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

States of Matter SummaryStates of Matter Summary

Solid

Liquid

Gas

Definite Volume?

YES

YES

NO

Definite Shape?

YES

NO

NO

Temp. increase

Small Expans.

Small Expans.

Large Expans.

Compressible?

NO

NO

YES

Page 65: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Solid Liquid Gas

Melt Evaporate

CondenseFreeze

Changes of State Summary

Page 66: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Heating Curve of Water

Temperature does not change during changes of state. That is why the line is horizontal at those points on the curve.

Page 67: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Physical or Chemical?• Flammability

– Chemical

• Malleability– Physical

• Melting point– Physical (change of state)

• Ability to rust– Chemical

• Ability to tarnish– Chemical

Page 68: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Liquid Layers• If you pour together liquids that don’t

mix and have different densities, they will form layers in the order of their densities.

Imagine that the liquids have the following densities: – 10g/cm3. 3g/cm3.– 6g/cm3. 5g/cm3.

Which density value goes with each layer?

3 g/cm3

5 g/cm3

6 g/cm3

10 g/cm3

Page 69: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Calculating Density

• Density = Mass Volume

• Units: g/mL or g/cm3

A block of wood has a mass of 400 g and a volume of 650 cm3. What is the density of the wood in g/cm3?

m = 400 g v = 650 cm3

D = m/vD = 400 g 650 cm3

D = 0.6 g/cm3

Page 70: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Learning Objective

Today you will…• Demonstrate level of mastery of Unit 1

material

Page 71: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Today’s Agenda

• Warm Up• Review for Test• Unit 1 Test• Fill out Unit 2 Key Terms• Start Notes for Unit 2• Exit Slip

Page 72: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Exit Slip

• What was the design of the boat that held the most pennies? Why did this boat win?

Page 73: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Unit 1 Key Terms

• Compressibility-the property of being able to occupy less space; capable of being more compact

• Fluidity-the property of flowing easily; the state of being fluid rather than viscous

• Kinetic Energy-the energy of an object due to its motion• Sublimation-a change directly from the solid to gaseous state

without becoming liquid• Temperature-a measurement of the average kinetic energy of

the particles in a system• Vaporization-gasify; to turn into a gas; evaporate• Viscosity-the state of being thick, sticky, and semifluid in

consistency; having a high resistance to flow

Page 74: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Unit 1 Key Terms• Boiling point-the temperature at which a liquid boils and

turns to vapor.• Buoyancy-the ability or tendency to float in water or air or

some other fluid• Chemical change-a change in the chemical composition of a

substance to produce a new material with new properties• Chemical property-any of a material's properties that

becomes evident during a chemical reaction; any quality that can be established only by changing a substance's chemical identity

• Condensation-the conversion of a vapor or gas to a liquid• Conductivity-the degree to which a specified material

conducts electricity

Page 75: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Unit 1 Key Terms

• Density-the degree of compactness of a substance; measured by the quantity of mass per unit volume

• Ductility-capable of being pulled or stretched into thin wire by mechanical force without breaking; molded easily into a new form

• Freezing-the withdrawal of heat to change something from a liquid to a solid

• Gas-an airlike fluid substance which expands freely to fill any space available

• Liquid-having a consistency like that of water or oil; flowing freely but of constant volume

• Malleability-the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking

Page 76: Unit 1, Properties of Matter. Warm Up An experiment requires the use of a lab apron, goggles, and insulated mitts or beaker tongs. The purpose of these

Unit 1 Key Terms• Mass-quantity or amount of something• Melting-change something to a liquid condition by heating it• Phase change-a change from one state (solid or liquid or gas) to another

without a change in chemical composition• Physical change-a process in which the basic chemical identity of the

substances in unchanged; a good example is heating water to its boiling point; the water changes from liquid to gas, but is still water

• Physical property-a property which can be determined without changing something chemically

• Reactivity-the state or power of being reactive or the degree to which a thing is reactive

• Solid-of definite shape and volume; firm; neither liquid nor gaseous; "ice is water in the solid state"

• Volume-the amount of space that a substance or object occupies, or that is enclosed within a container