1 / 55

Measurements and Calculations Chapter 2

Measurements and Calculations Chapter 2. Measurement. Quantitative Observation Comparison Based on an Accepted Scale e.g. Meter Stick Has 2 Parts – the Number and the Unit Number Tells Comparison Unit Tells Scale. Scientific Notation.

lani
Télécharger la présentation

Measurements and Calculations Chapter 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Measurements and Calculations Chapter 2

  2. Measurement • Quantitative Observation • Comparison Based on an Accepted Scale • e.g. Meter Stick • Has 2 Parts – the Number and the Unit • Number Tells Comparison • Unit Tells Scale

  3. Scientific Notation • Technique Used to Express Very Large or Very Small Numbers • Based on Powers of 10

  4. Writing Numbers in Scientific Notation 1. Move the decimal point so there is only one non-zero number to the left of it. The new number is now between 1 and 9 2. Multiply the new number by 10n • where n is the number of places you moved the decimal point 3. Determine the sign on the exponent n • If the decimal point was moved left, n is + • If the decimal point was moved right, n is – • If the decimal point was not moved, n is 0

  5. Writing Numbers in Standard Form • Determine the sign of n of 10n • If n is + the decimal point will move to the right • If n is – the decimal point will move to the left • Determine the value of the exponent of 10 • Tells the number of places to move the decimal point • Move the decimal point and rewrite the number

  6. Standard to Scientific Notation • 0.0000000011 • 8,031,000,000 • 75,000,000 • 0.0005710

  7. Scientific to Standard Notation • 7.10 x 10-5 • 9.38 x 1012 • 2.75 x 10-7 • 5.22 x 104

  8. More practice • Change to standard notation • 0.00065 x 106 • 391 x 10-2 • Change to scientific notation • 41080.642 • 1.8732

  9. Related Units in the Metric System • All units in the metric system are related to the fundamental unit by a power of 10 • The power of 10 is indicated by a prefix • The prefixes are always the same, regardless of the fundamental or basic unit

  10. Length • SI unit = meter (m) • About 3½ inches longer than a yard • 1 meter = one ten-millionth the distance from the North Pole to the Equator = distance between marks on standard metal rod in a Paris vault = distance covered by a certain number of wavelengths of a special color of light • Commonly use centimeters (cm) • 1 m = 100 cm • 1 cm = 0.01 m = 10 mm • 1 inch = 2.54 cm (exactly)

  11. Figure 2.1: Comparison of English and metricunits for length on a ruler.

  12. Volume • Measure of the amount of three-dimensional space occupied by a substance • SI unit = cubic meter (m3) • Commonly measure solid volume in cubic centimeters (cm3 (cm x cm x cm)) • 1 m3 = 106 cm3 • 1 cm3 = 10-6 m3 = 0.000001 m3 • Commonly measure liquid or gas volume in milliliters (mL) • 1 L is slightly larger than 1 quart • 1 L = 1 dL3 = 1000 mL = 103mL • 1 mL = 0.001 L = 10-3 L • 1 mL = 1 cm3

  13. Figure 2.3:A 100-mL graduated cylinder.

  14. Mass • Measure of the amount of matter present in an object • SI unit = kilogram (kg) • Commonly measure mass in grams (g) or milligrams (mg) • 1 kg = 2.2046 pounds, 1 lbs.. = 453.59 g • 1 kg = 1000 g = 103 g, 1 g = 1000 mg = 103 mg • 1 g = 0.001 kg = 10-3 kg, 1 mg = 0.001 g = 10-3 g

  15. Figure 2.4:An electronic analytical balance used in chemistry labs.

  16. Metric conversions • 250 mL to Liters • 1.75 kg to grams • 88 daL to mL

  17. Metric conversions • 475 cg to mg • 328 hm to Mm • 0.00075 nL to cL

  18. Uncertainty in Measured Numbers • A measurement always has some amount of uncertainty • Uncertainty comes from limitations of the techniques used for comparison • To understand how reliable a measurement is, we need to understand the limitations of the measurement

  19. Reporting Measurements • To indicate the uncertainty of a single measurement scientists use a system called significant figures • The last digit written in a measurement is the number that is considered to be uncertain • Unless stated otherwise, the uncertainty in the last digit is ±1

  20. Rules for Counting Significant Figures • Nonzero integers are always significant • How many significant figures are in the following examples: • 2753 • 89.659 • 0.281

  21. Significant Figures • Zeros • Captive zeros are always significant • How many significant figures are in the following examples: • 1001.4 • 55.0702 • 0.4900008

  22. Significant Figures • Zeros • Leading zeros never count as significant figures • How many significant figures are in the following examples: • 0.00048 • 0.0037009 • 0.0000000802

  23. Significant Figures • Zeros • Trailing zeros are significant if the number has a decimal point • How many significant figures are in the following examples: • 22,000 • 63,850. • 0.00630100 • 2.70900 • 100,000

  24. Significant Figures Scientific Notation • All numbers before the “x” are significant. Don’t worry about any other rules. • 7.0 x 10-4 g has 2 significant figures • 2.010 x 108 m has 4 significant figures

  25. Rules for Rounding Off • If the digit to be removed • is less than 5, the preceding digit stays the same • Round 87.482 to 4 sig figs. • is equal to or greater than 5, the preceding digit is increased by 1 • Round 0.00649710 to 3 sig figs.

  26. Rules for Rounding Off • In a series of calculations, carry the extra digits to the final result and then round off • Ex: Convert 80,150,000 seconds to years • Don’t forget to add place-holding zeros if necessary to keep value the same!! • Round 80,150,000 to 3 sig figs.

  27. Multiplication/Division with Significant Figures Count the number of significant figures in each measurement • Round the result so it has the same number of significant figures as the measurement with the smallest number of significant figures 14.593 cm x 0.200 cm = 3.7 x 103 x 0.00340 =

  28. Calculations with Significant Figures • Calculators/computers do not know about significant figures!!! • Exact numbers do not affect the number of significant figures in an answer • Answers to calculations must be rounded to the proper number of significant figures • round at the end of the calculation

  29. Exact Numbers • Exact Numbers are numbers known with certainty • Unlimited number of significant figures • They are either • counting numbers • number of sides on a square • or defined • 100 cm = 1 m, 12 in = 1 ft, 1 in = 2.54 cm • 1 kg = 1000 g, 1 LB = 16 oz • 1000 mL = 1 L; 1 gal = 4 qts. • 1 minute = 60 seconds

  30. Problem Solving and Dimensional Analysis • Many problems in chemistry involve using equivalence statements to convert one unit of measurement to another • Conversion factors are relationships between two units • Conversion factors generated from equivalence statements • e.g. 1 inch = 2.54 cm can give or

  31. Problem Solving and Dimensional Analysis • Arrange conversion factor so starting unit is on the bottom of the conversion factor • You may string conversion factors together for problems that involve more than one conversion factor.

  32. Converting One Unit to Another • Find the relationship(s) between the starting and final units. • Write an equivalence statement and a conversion factor for each relationship. • Arrange the conversion factor(s) to cancel starting unit and result in goal unit.

  33. Converting One Unit to Another • Check that the units cancel properly • Multiply all the numbers across the top and divide by each number on the bottom to give the answer with the proper unit. • Round your answer to the correct number of significant figures. • Check that your answer makes sense!

  34. English Units Conversions • 155.0 pounds to grams • 2.00 x 108 seconds to hours • 28.5 inches to feet • 4.0 gallons to quarts • 48.39 minutes to hours

  35. More Difficult Conversions • 0.091 ft2 to inches2 • 47.1 mm3 to kL • 682 mg to pounds • 3.5 x 10-4 L to cm3

  36. Complex Conversion Problems • 25 miles per hour to feet per second • 4.70 gallons per minute to mL per year • 5.6 x 10-6 centiliters per square meter (cL/m2) to cubic meters per square foot (m3/ft2)

  37. Temperature Scales • Fahrenheit Scale, °F • Water’s freezing point = 32°F, boiling point = 212°F • Celsius Scale, °C • Temperature unit larger than the Fahrenheit • Water’s freezing point = 0°C, boiling point = 100°C • Kelvin Scale, K • Temperature unit same size as Celsius • Water’s freezing point = 273 K, boiling point = 373 K

  38. Temperature Conversions • Fahrenheit to Celsius oC = 5/9(oF -32) • Celsius to Fahrenheit oF = 1.8(oC) +32 • Celsius to Kelvin K = oC + 273 • Kelvin to Celsius oC = K – 273

  39. Figure 2.6: Thermometers based on the three temperature scales in (a) ice water and (b) boiling water.

  40. Figure 2.7: The three major temperature scales.

  41. Figure 2.8: Converting 70. 8C to units measured on the Kelvin scale.

  42. Figure 2.9: Comparison of the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales.

  43. Temperature Conversion Examples • 12oC to K • 248 K to oF • 98.6oF to K • 86oF to oC • -5.0oC to oF • 352 K to oC

  44. Density • Density is a property of matter representing the mass per unit volume • For equal volumes, denser object has larger mass • For equal masses, denser object has small volume • Solids = g/cm3 • 1 cm3 = 1 mL • Liquids = g/mL • Gases = g/L • Volume of a solid can be determined by water displacement • Density : solids > liquids >>> gases • In a heterogeneous mixture, denser object sinks

  45. Using Density in Calculations

  46. Spherical droplets of mercury, a very dense liquid.

More Related