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Matter Pure Substances Mixtures Elements Compounds Heterogenous Homogenous

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Matter. Pure Substances. Mixtures. Elements. Compounds. Heterogenous. Homogenous. Mixture: Two or more substances that: 1) Are not chemically combined with each other 2) Can be separated by physical means (ex. filtration). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Matter

Matter

Pure Substances Mixtures

Elements Compounds Heterogenous Homogenous

Page 2: Matter

Mixture:Mixture: Two or more substances that:

1) Are not chemically combined with each other

2) Can be separated by physical means (ex. filtration).

Substances in a mixture keep their individual properties.

Page 3: Matter

Two Categories of Mixtures:Two Categories of Mixtures:

1) Heterogeneous Mixture – the substances of the mixture have visible differences and are not transparent.

Examples: orange juice with pulp, fruit salad, salsa

*** hetero = different ****** hetero = different ***

Page 4: Matter

Two Categories of Mixtures cont’dTwo Categories of Mixtures cont’d::

2) Homogeneous Mixture – the substances have no visible differences and are not

transparent.

Examples: tap water, salt water, air, orange juice without pulp, and skim milk.

*** homo = the same or similar ****** homo = the same or similar ***

Page 5: Matter

Is it a Heterogeneous or Homogeneous Is it a Heterogeneous or Homogeneous Mixture?Mixture?

To determine if a mixture is a homogeneous mixture or heterogeneous mixture we look to see if there are visible differences in the mixture.

Heterogeneous (different) = Visible differences

Homogeneous (same) = No Visible differences

Page 6: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous mixture?

1) water

Page 7: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous solution?

1) water (homogeneous)

2) air

Page 8: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous solution?

1) water (homogeneous)

2) air (homogeneous)

3) vegetable soup

Page 9: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous solution?

1) water (homogeneous)

2) air (homogeneous)

3) vegetable soup (heterogeneous)

4) coffee (with & without milk)

Page 10: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous solution?

1) water (homogeneous)

2) air (homogeneous)

3) vegetable soup (heterogeneous)

4) coffee (with & without milk) (homogeneous)

5) beach sand

Page 11: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous solution?

1) water (homogeneous)

2) air (homogeneous)

3) vegetable soup (heterogeneous)

4) coffee (with & without milk) (homogeneous)

5) beach sand (heterogeneous)

6) salsa

Page 12: Matter

Would the following be considered a heterogeneous or homogeneous solution?

1) water (homogeneous)

2) air (homogeneous)

3) vegetable soup (heterogeneous)

4) coffee (with & without milk) (homogeneous)

5) beach sand (heterogeneous)

6) salsa (heterogeneous)

Page 13: Matter

Solutions:Solutions:- Special kind of mixtures where one substance dissolves in another.

- - Solutions are very well mixed so they look the same throughout the mixture.

Page 14: Matter

• A solution is a homogeneous mixture

• It is the best mixed of all mixtures.

• A solution has a substance that is dissolved (solute) and a substance that does the dissolving (solvent).

Solutions cont’d:Solutions cont’d:

Page 15: Matter

EExamplexample of a Mixture and a Solution of a Mixture and a Solution

A MixtureA Mixture

Sand in Water - Sand sinks to the bottom of a bowl. The liquid does not look the same everywhere.

Page 16: Matter

A Solution A Solution (a special type of mixture)(a special type of mixture)

Sugar in Water - Sugar dissolves and spreads throughout the glass of water. The liquid looks the same everywhere

Page 17: Matter

Solute: the substance being dissolved.

Solvent: the substance that does the dissolving. It usually makes up most of the solution.

Solution: solute + solvent

SoluteSolute SolutionSolutionSolventSolvent

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