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 Does matter matter?  Of course it does –  It’s all around, in and out,  In fact, it’s what we’re all about!  Anything with mass and volume  Composed of atoms  All one type of atom = element  More than one kind of atom bonded in a specific ratio = compound  Elements and compounds are pure substances (in chemistry usually referred to as just substances)  Solid – lowest energy , atoms/molecules vibrate, but have a fixed position – definite volume and definite shape  Liquid – moderate energy – atoms/molecules roll and tumble about each other, flow definite volume and variable shape  Gas – high energy, atoms/molecules are moving rapidly and colliding with each other, variable shape and volume  Plasma – highest energy, ionized particles, sun, stars, lightning  Melting – solid to liquid  Freezing – liquid to solid  Evaporation – liquid to gas at room temp.  Vaporization – liquid to gas with heat added  Condensation – gas to liquid  Sublimation – solid to gas  Deposition – gas to solid  Phase changes are physical changes  Unique characteristics of a substance that can be observed without changing the substance.  Such as:odor, color, volume, state (phase), density, melting point and boiling point  Extensive physical properties depend on the quantity of the sample.  Such as: mass, length, volume  Intensive physical properties do not vary with the quantity of the sample.  Such as: density, color, boiling point  Properties of a substance that can only be observed by actually changing the substance into something else. New substances are formed during a chemical reaction.  Such as: flammability (burning), rusting or tarnishing  Changes that do not affect the composition of the substance.  A change in one or more physical properties.  Such as: size (tearing a sheet of paper into small pieces), phase change (solid to liquid)  Changes that involve a change in the fundamental components of a substance. One or more substances change into one or more new substances through a chemical reaction.  Such as: hydrogen combining with oxygen to form water  Reactant + reactant  Product  Reactant  product + product  What might indicate a chemical change has occurred?  Dramatic change of color  Production of a gas  Production of a new and different odor  Production of a precipitate (solid)  Change in energy (change in temperature, sound, light)  Pure substances – elements and compounds – definite composition  Mixtures – things with variable composition such as salt water or wood. May be homogeneous or heterogeneous.  Homogeneous mixture– same throughout – aka solution – ex. Kool-Aid, alloys, air  Heterogeneous mixture – regions with different properties –ex. Italian salad dressing, muddy water  Alloy – homogeneous mixture (solution) of metallic elements –ex. Sterling silver  Mixtures can be separated by physical means such as:  Filtration – particle size  Distillation/evaporation – boiling points  Extraction – solubility  (Re)Crystallization – evaporation/vaporization  Decanting – pouring to leave sediment  Chromatography – molecular weight  Centrifuging – particle size, weight, state
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            