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Matte r Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneou s Solution Heterogene ous

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Page 1: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Pure Substances

Elements

Compounds & Molecules

Mixtures

Homogeneous

Solution

Heterogeneous

Page 2: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Matter is anything that has MASS and takes up SPACE

Law of Conservation of Mass: Matter cannot be created or destroyed

Page 3: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Examples of Matter:• Water• Chex Mix• Plastic• Humans• Air

Examples that aren’t Matter:• Space• Light• Sound• Energy• Heat

Page 4: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

The Atom: The unbreakable building blocks that make up all matter

Nucleus:Middle of the atom, made up of protons (+ charge) and neutrons (no charge)

Electrons ( - charge)

Page 5: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Physical Properties

All matter has physical and chemical properties

Physical Properties are properties that you can measure or see

Examples: mass, density, color, temperature, malleability and brittleness, phase (solid, liquid, gas)

Page 6: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Physical Changes

Physical changes change the physical properties but DO NOT change the matter into something else• Phase Changes• Changing Shape

Physical Changes are reversible

Page 7: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Chemical Properties

Chemical Properties are properties that allow the ability for a chemical change/reaction to occur

They can only be observed when matter goes through a chemical change, can’t know just by looking at itExamples: Flammability, Ability to react with specific materials

Page 8: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Chemical Changes

Chemical Changes: Any change that changes one substance into a different substance

Created by a chemical reaction

Chemical changes are very difficult or impossible to undo

Signs of a Chemical Change

Page 9: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Types of MatterMatter is separated into two major categories:

1) Pure substance cannot be separated into different kinds of matter by physical means and are made up of one single chemical throughout

2) Mixtures are made up of multiple substances

Most matter in the world around us are mixtures

Page 10: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Pure Substances

Elements

Compounds & Molecules

Mixtures

Homogeneous

Solution

Heterogeneous

Page 11: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Elements

Element: a substance that cannot be separated into simpler substances by chemical means• Each element is a unique type of atom• Atoms of the same element are all similar to

each other and different from atoms of any other element

• Elements are located on the periodic table

Page 12: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Periodic Table Layout

Organized into periods (rows) and groups (columns), elements separate from the table are part of Periods 6 and 7

Page 13: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Periodic Table

Element Symbol: 1 or 2 letters that represent the elementFirst letter is ALWAYS capitalized, second letter NEVER is

Atomic Number: Number of Protons

Page 14: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Atomic Mass

The atomic mass listed for an element on the periodic table is the mass of a single atom in atomic mass units (amu)

1 amu = 1.66 x 10-24 grams

Atomic mass units are not practical for experiments, our balances can’t measure a mass that small

Page 15: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Atomic MassTo turn amu into something more usable in lab we use a unit called the mole

1 mole = 6.02 x 1023 atomsThis is Avogadro’s Number

Atomic Mass = Number of grams in 1 mol

Page 16: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Calculating Moles using Atomic Mass

Use atomic mass as a conversion factor between moles and grams

How many moles are in a 10.0g sample of Carbon?

10.0 grams x 1 mole = 0.833 moles 12.01g

Page 17: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Try it on your own

You have 20 grams of Helium, how many moles do you have?

Page 18: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Calculating Mass from Moles

You have 5 moles of Nitrogen, how many grams do you have?

5 moles x 14.00 grams = 70 grams1 mole

Page 19: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Try it on your own

You have 2 moles of Lithium, how many grams do you have?

Page 20: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Pure Substances

Elements

Compounds & Molecules

Mixtures

Homogeneous

Solution

Heterogeneous

Page 21: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Review - Types of MatterMatter is separated into two major categories:

1) Pure substance cannot be separated into different kinds of matter by physical means and are made up of one single chemical throughout

2) Mixtures are made up of multiple substances

Most matter in the world around us are mixtures

Page 22: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Compounds and Molecules

Compounds and molecules are pure substances

They cannot be separated by physical means but can be separated by chemical means

Their physical and chemical properties come from the shape of the molecule, not from what they are made of

Page 23: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Compounds vs. Molecules

A molecule is ANY group of atoms chemically bonded together

Examples: H2 (Hydrogen Gas) CH4 (Methane)

N2 (Nitrogen Gas)

Page 24: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Compounds vs. Molecules

A compound is a substance containing DIFFERENT elements that are chemically bonded together.

Examples: H2O (Water)

C2H6O (Ethanol)

NaCl (Salt)Almost everything in this world is made of compounds!

Page 25: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Understanding Chemical Formulas

Chemical formulas are written using element symbols

Remember: Element symbols can have either 1 or 2 letters and ALWAYS start with a capital letter!

Page 26: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Chemical Formula PracticeHow many different elements are in each molecule?

NaCl KI

HCN KCl

MgO Xe

Page 27: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Subscripts

Subscripts are used to tell you how many copies of an element is in a molecule

H2 = 2 Hydrogen in one element

H2O = 2 Hydrogen, 1 Oxygen in one element

Page 28: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Practicing Reading Subscripts

H(CO3)2

How many H’s

How many C’s

How many O’s

H2SO4

How many H’s?

How many S’s?

How many O’s?

Page 29: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Molar Mass

Molar mass = Number of grams in one mole of the molecule

You need to add up the atomic mass of each element (multiplied by any subscripts) to get the total mass of the molecule

Page 30: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Practicing Molar Mass

Molar Mass of HCN

Mass of Hydrogen: 1.008Mass of Carbon: 12.01Mass of Nitrogen: 14.01

Molar Mass of HCN = 1.008 + 12.01 + 14.01 = 27.03 g/mol

Molar Mass of H2SO4

Mass of H: 1.008 x 2Mass of S: 32.07Mass of O: 16.00 x 4

Molar Mass of H2SO4 =

2.016 + 32.07 + 64.00 = 98.09 g/mol

Page 31: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Converting between grams and moles for molecules

Converting between grams, moles, and atoms is the same process for molecules as it is for individual elements

Instead of using atomic mass to convert between grams and moles you need to use the molar mass of the molecule

Page 32: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Molecule Conversion Example

You have 100 grams of Table Salt (NaCl), how many moles do you have?

100g NaCl x 1 mol NaCl = 1.71mol NaCl

58.44g NaCl

Page 33: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Molar Mass

Molar mass = Number of grams in one mole of the molecule

You need to add up the atomic mass of each element (multiplied by any subscripts) to get the total mass of the molecule

Page 34: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Percent (%) Composition

Remember from Lab 1C

% composition = mass of the part x 100

mass of the whole

We can find the Percent Composition of a molecule the same way

Page 35: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Percent Composition of Molecules

% comp = molar mass of element x 100

molar mass of molecule

Example: What percentage of the mass of H2SO4 comes from the Oxygen?

Mass of O: 16.00 x 4 = 64 g/molMass of H2SO4: 98.09 g/mol

% Oxygen: (64/98.09) x 100 = 65.2%

Page 36: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Percent Composition Example

Find the Percent Composition of both Copper and Chlorine in CuCl2

Molar Mass of Copper:Molar Mass of Chlorine:Molar Mass of Molecule:

% composition of Copper:

% composition of Chlorine:

Page 37: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Pure Substances

Elements

Compounds & Molecules

Mixtures

Homogeneous

Solution

Heterogeneous

Page 38: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Mixtures

Mixtures: Matter that contains more than one substance

Mixtures can be separated by physical means- sorting, filtering, heating, or cooling

Page 39: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Types of Mixtures

Homogeneous Mixtures looks the same throughoutHeterogeneous Mixtures look different throughout

Page 40: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Examples of MixturesDecide whether each mixture is a homogeneous mixture (HoM) or a heterogeneous mixture (HeM)

SoapChocolate Chip CookieGraniteGatoradeShampoo

Chex MixSandLemonadeGranola BarMilk

Page 41: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Matter

Pure Substances

Elements

Compounds & Molecules

Mixtures

Homogeneous

Solution

Heterogeneous

Page 42: Matter Pure Substances Elements Compounds & Molecules Mixtures Homogeneous Solution Heterogeneous

Solutions

Solutions are a specific type of homogeneous mixture where one substance (solute) gets dissolved in another substance (solvent)

The substance being dissolved (the solute) completely breaks down and gets absorbed by the solvent:

Examples: Salt Water, Pop, lemonade