Title: Changes in Matter
1Changes in Matter
- Chapter 1, Lesson 3, Page E22
2Essential Questions
- What is the difference between a physical and
chemical change? - How can physical and chemical changes be used to
identify substances and to separate mixtures? - What does the law of conservation of matter say?
3Physical and Chemical Changes
- Changes in which no new substances are formed are
physical changes. All changes in state are
physical changes. - When you shape clay on a potters wheel, you
change its form. This is a physical change.
Cutting up pieces of paper is also a physical
change. - But if an electric current is sent through water,
a different kind of change takes place.
4Physical and Chemical Changes
- Gases are produced, but the gases are not water.
They are oxygen and hydrogen, the substances that
make up water. In the space shuttles main
engines, liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen are
mixed and burned as a fuel. Water a new
substance is produced. Changes in which one or
more new substances are formed are called
chemical changes, or chemical reactions.
5Marshmallows melting is a physical change.
Marshmallow burning, is a chemical change because
you have burnt it.
6Physical and Chemical Changes
- Burning is a kind of chemical reaction. When
charcoal burns, for example, carbon reacts with
oxygen to produce carbon dioxide. Carbon and
oxygen are the reactants, the starting substance
in a chemical reaction. Carbon dioxide is a
product of the reaction. It is the new substance.
7Physical and Chemical Changes
- The ability of a substance to react chemically is
called reactivity. - There are some clues that can help you identify a
chemical reaction. They include a change in color
or the production of light, heat, or a gas. - Paper turns black as it burns, for example. When
baking soda is mixed with vinegar, it bubbles.
This shows that carbon dioxide has been produced.
A candle produces heat and light as it burns.
8Physical and Chemical Changes
- Sometimes it is hard to tell the difference.
- Cherry-flavored drink powder is pale pink. When
you mix it with water, it turns bright red. But
the powder has only dissolved. It has gone
through a physical change, not a chemical
reaction. When you open a cold soft drink,
bubbles are produced. But a chemical reaction has
not taken place. The carbon dioxide has simply
come out of the solution. - Lets answer our questions.
9When sodium combines with chlorine to make sodium
chloride (salt), light is produced. This new
product shows that a chemical reaction has
occurred.
Steel wool burns, but only in pure oxygen, not in
air. Steel wool is not as reactive as charcoal,
which does burn in air.
10Using physical and chemical properties
- Chemical reactions often form products with
properties that are different from those of the
reactants. - For example, when iron rusts, it turns red or
brown. - If you examine rust carefully, you will find that
it is no longer shiny like iron. Rust is powdery,
while iron bends and is easily formed into other
shapes. Iron can conduct electricity, but rust
cannot.
11Using physical and chemical properties
- Therefore, a new substance has been formed. A
chemical reaction has taken place. - Chemical properties are also important in
deciding how certain substances can be used. - For example, many solutions are either acids or
bases. Acids are sour, and weak acids can be used
to flavor foods. Weak bases can be used in
cleaning products. However, strong acids and
strong bases are dangerous! - Physical and chemical properties can also be used
to separate mixtures or to identify substances in
mixtures.
12Iron is a shiny metal.
Rust is not shiny but instead red and powdery.
Now lets answer the questions.
13Health LinkHeartburn
- Many people suffer from a condition called
hartburn, which has nothing to do with the heart.
The discomfort of heartburn is caused by a strong
acid hydrochloric acid produced as a
digestive juice by the stomach. Heartburn occurs
when the acid backs up into the esophagus, or
food tube, which leads from the mouth down to the
stomach. To counter the discomfort, people
swallow medications that contain a weak base,
such as bicarbonate of soda. The base reacts with
the acid to produce carbon dioxide and salt or
other harmless substances.
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15Conservation of Matter
- Matter is neither created nor destroyed during a
physical change or a chemical change. Scientists
call this the law of conservation of matter. - This law is easier to prove for some changes that
it is for others. If you cut a piece of paper
into tiny pieces, you have not made more paper.
However, when water changes from a liquid to a
gas, there may appear to be more matter because
the volume of water vapor is greater. But no new
matter has been produced.
16Conservation of Matter
- It may be harder to believe that matter is not
produced or destroyed during a chemical change.
The reactants seem to disappear and the products
seem to appear. - However, in the 1700s, Antoine Lavoisier, a
French chemist, was among the first scientists to
carefully measure chemical reactions. He found
that during a chemical change, the mass of the
products equals the mass of the reactants.
Because there is no change in mass after a
chemical reaction, there Is not more and no less
matter than there was before the reaction. - Lets answer our questions.
17Summary
- Physical changes do not result in the formation
of new substances. However, new substances are
formed during chemical changes. Physical and
chemical properties can be used to identify
substances and to separate mixtures. Matter is
neither produced nor destroyed during physical
and chemical reactions. - Lets answer questions 1-2, 4-5 together orally
from page E27 as well as our essential questions.