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Ch. 1 Introduction: Some Basic Concepts. The study of the composition of matter and the changes that matter undergoes. Chemistry. Matter. Anything that has mass and takes up space. States of Matter. Solid. Definite shape AND volume Incompressible Particles are packed tightly together.
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The study of the composition of matter and the changes that matter undergoes Chemistry
Matter • Anything that has mass and takes up space
Solid • Definite shape AND volume • Incompressible • Particles are packed tightly together
Liquid • Definite volume • Takes the shape of its container • Almost incompressible-particles not rigidly packed
Gas • Takes the volume and the shape of its container • Particles in a gas are spaced far apart • Easily compressed
Vapor • The gaseous state of a substance that is generally a solid or a liquid at room temperature
Physical Properties • A quality or condition that can be observed or measured without changing the substances composition • Color, solubility, odor, hardness, density, melting point, boiling point
Physical Change • Changes the material without changing the composition • Boiling, freezing, dissolving, melting, condensing, breaking, splitting, cracking, cutting, crushing, bending……… • Usually reversible
Pure Substance • Contain only one kind of matter • Have identical physical properties
Elements • The simplest forms of matter that can exist under laboratory condition • Can not be separated into simpler substances by chemical means • The building blocks for all other substances
Chemical Symbol • One or 2 letters • The first letter is always capitalized
Compounds • 2 or more elements chemically combined • Can be separated into simpler substances by chemical means + = Sodium Metal Sodium Chloride Chlorine Gas
Compounds • The subscript numbers in chemical formulas represent the proportions of elements that make up the compounds • Pb2(SO4)3 • Pb (lead) 2 • S(Sulfur) 3 • Oxygen 12
Law of Definite Proportions (Law of Constant Composition) • The elemental composition of a pure compound is ALWAYS the same • i.e. Water= H2O = 2 Hydrogens: 1 Oxygen ALWAYS
2 Types of Mixtures • Heterogeneous Mixtures • Homogeneous Mixtures
Mixture • A physical blend of 2 substances • Compositions may vary
Heterogeneous Mixture • One that is NOT uniform in composition
Homogeneous Mixture • The same throughout
Solution • A homogeneous mixture • Solutions may be solids, liquids, or gases • Same composition throughout
Phase • Any part of a system with uniform composition and properties Phase 1 Phase 2
Separation of Mixtures Distillation
Separation of Mixtures Centrifuge
Chemical Property • The ability of a substance to undergo a chemical reaction to form a new substance • I.e. flammability, alkalinity, acidity, rusting • Chemical properties are only observed when a substance undergoes a chemical change
Chemical Changes (Reaction) • One or more substances change into new substances • 2 H2 (g) + O2 (g) 2 H2O (g) Reactants Products
Indicators of a Chemical Reaction • Energy is absorbed or given off (change in temperature) • Change in color • Change in odor • Formation of a solid (precipitation) • Formation of a gas
Scientific Method • One logical, systematic approach to the solution of scientific problems. Steps include: • Making observations • Testing hypothesis • Developing theories
Observation • Use your senses to obtain information directly
Hypothesis • A proposed explanation for an observation based on previous knowledge (or research) • Must be specific • Must be testable • Is only useful if it accounts for what is actually observed
A means to test a hypothesis Experiment
Manipulated Variable (Independent Variable) • The variable that you can change • Time • Temperature • Volume • Speed • Pressure Independent Variable
Responding Variable (Dependent Variable) • The variable that is observed during the experiment Dependent Variable
For the results of an experiment to be accepted the experiment must produce the same results no matter how many times it is repeated or by whom
Theory • A broad and extensively tested explanation of why experiments give certain results. • A theory can NEVER be proven because a new experiment can always disprove it
Scientific Law • A concise statement that summarizes the results of many observations and experiments. • Scientific law describes natural phenomena without attempting to explain it
Qualitative Observation • Give results in a descriptive non-numerical form • Subjective • Ex. The solution is green, The precipitate is fluffy
Quantitative Observation • Gives results in a definite form • Numbers and units
Measurement • A quantity that has both a number and a unit • Measurements are only as exact as the instrument used to take it
International System of Units (SI) • Length = meter(m) • Mass = gram (g) • Temperature = kelvin (K) although often we will use Celsius • Time = second (s) • Amount of substance = mole (mol) • Volume = liter (L)
Prefixes • Mega (M) = 106 • Kilo (k) = 103 • Deci (d) = 10-1 • Centi (c) = 10-2 • Milli (m) = 10-3 • Micro (m) 10-6 • Nano (n) = 10-9 • Pico (p) = 10-12
Length • The distance between 2 points • Unit: meter (m)
Mass • The amount of matter an object has • Units: Grams • Measuring tools: Triple Beam Balance, Electronic scale, Analytical Scale