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Chemical and Physical Properties of Matter

Chemical and Physical Properties of Matter. Matter. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. Different matter has different physical and chemical properties. Physical Properties. A physical property of matter can be observed or measured without changing the matter’s identity.

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Chemical and Physical Properties of Matter

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  1. Chemical and Physical Properties of Matter

  2. Matter • Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. • Different matter has different physical and chemical properties.

  3. Physical Properties • A physical property of matter can be observed or measured without changing the matter’s identity. • Some physical properties are color, odor, mass, volume, magnetism, ability to conduct current, strength, flexibility, hardness, and texture. • Ex – Will your books fit into you backpack? You are using the physical property of volume.

  4. Physical Properties • Thermal conductivity – is the rate at which a substance transfer heat. Ex. Styrofoam is a poor conductor. • State of Matter – solid, liquid, or gas (ex: ice, water, water vapor) • Density – the mass per unit of volume. (ex: Lead is very dense so it is used to make an anchor.)

  5. Physical Properties • Solubility – is the ability of a substance to dissolve in another substance. (ex: Kool-Aid power dissolves is water.) Sometimes you can increase solubility by changing the temperature. • Ductility – is the ability of a substance to be pulled into a wire. (ex: Copper is often used to make wiring because it is ductile.) • Malleability – is the ability of a substance to be rolled or pounded into thin sheets. (ex: Aluminum can be rolled into sheets to make foil.)

  6. Physical Changes • A physical change is a change that affects one or more physical properties of a substance. • Ex. A piece of silver is pounded and molded into a heart-shaped pendent. (it is still silver) • Ex. – changing from a liquid to a solid (or any phase change) • Ex. – crushing an Aluminum can. It is still aluminum, just the shape has changed. • Ex – Sawdust – it is still wood – only in smaller pieces.

  7. Chemical Properties • Chemical properties describe matter based on its ability to change into new matter that has different properties (in the form of a chemical reaction). • Chemical changes occur when bonds break and new bonds form. • Ex. – burning wood, tarnishing, and rusting

  8. Chemical Properties • Flammability – is the ability of a substance to burn. (wood can burn, but ash and smoke cannot) • Reactivity – is the ability of two or more substances to combining and form one or more new substances. • Chemical reactions involve two main kinds of changes that you can observe – formation of new substances and changes in energy.

  9. Physical Properties vs. Chemical Properties • A nail will bend – physical property being changed is shape • A nail will rust – chemical property being changed is composition (iron is reacting with oxygen to make iron oxide - rust) • Alcohol will evaporate – physical change of state • Alcohol will burn – chemical change – it is not alcohol any more.

  10. How do I know that a chemical change is taking place? • There will be a change is odor, color, heat will be either absorbed or released, the substance will bubble or fizz, light or sound may be given off. • Ex. Soured milk Alka-Seltzer tablets fizzing car rusting cake baking chemical reaction going on in your body

  11. Changes in Energy • As matter changes, it can either absorb or release energy. A change in energy occurs during a chemical reaction. • An endothermic reaction is a reaction in which energy is absorbed. • Many endothermic reactions occur when heat is constantly added. (Ex: egg frying) In other words…they need energy to keep going.

  12. Changes in Energy • An exothermic reaction is a reaction that releases energy in the form of heat. • After an exothermic reaction, the products have less energy than the reactants. (Ex: the burning of fuel) • The reaction between fuel and oxygen in an airplane engine releases energy, mostly in the form of heat. The expansion and movement of the gases out of the plane exerts a force that moves the plane forward.

  13. Can physical and chemical changes be reversed? • Physical changes are easily reversed. You can melt ice and then freeze it again. • Chemical changed are not easily reversed. When a firework explodes it would be almost impossible to put the materials back together.

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