Science, Matter, and Energy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Science, Matter, and Energy

Description:

Science, Matter, and Energy Chapter 2 * Figure 2.8: The high-throughput economies of most developed countries rely on continually increasing the rates of energy and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:341
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: webMnstat6
Learn more at: https://web.mnstate.edu
Category:
Tags: energy | matter | science

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Science, Matter, and Energy


1
Science, Matter, and Energy
  • Chapter 2

2
Science Focus Easter Island
  • Solving a mystery
  • Population crash cause and effect
  • Evolving hypotheses
  • Unsustainable resource use?
  • Rats?
  • Disease?
  • Science as a process

3
2-1 What Is Science?
  • Concept 2-1 Scientists collect data and develop
    theories, models, and laws about how nature works.

4
Science
  • Search for order in nature
  • Observe behavior
  • Attempt to quantify cause and effect
  • Make predictions

5
The Scientific Process (1)
  • Identify problem/question
  • Design experiments
  • Collect data
  • Formulate hypothesis

6
The Scientific Process (2)
  • Develop models
  • Propose theories
  • Derive natural laws

7
What Scientists Do
Fig. 2-2
8
Propose an hypothesis to explain data
Use hypothesis to make testable predictions
Perform an experiment to test predictions
Make testable predictions
Accept hypothesis
Revise hypothesis
Test predictions
Scientific theory Well-tested and widely
accepted hypothesis
Fig. 2-2
9
Identify a problem
Stepped Art
Fig. 2-2
10
Results of Science
  • Goals
  • Scientific theories
  • Scientific laws
  • Degree of certainty and general acceptance
  • Frontier science
  • Reliable science
  • Unreliable science

11
Scientific Limitations
  • Limitations 100 certain?
  • Absolute proof versus probability
  • Observational bias
  • Complex interactions, many variables
  • Estimates and extrapolating numbers
  • Science does not answer moral or ethical questions

12
2-2 What Is Matter?
  • Concept 2-2A Matter consists of elements and
    compounds, which are in turn made up of atoms,
    ions, or molecules.

13
What Is Matter?
  • Matter has mass and occupies space
  • Elements and Compounds
  • Atoms
  • Ions
  • Molecules

14
Elements Important to the Study of Environmental
Science
15
Building Blocks of Matter (1)
  • Atomic Theory elements made from atoms
  • Atoms
  • Protons positive charge
  • Neutrons uncharged
  • Electrons negative charge

16
Building Blocks of Matter (2)
  • Atomic number
  • Number of protons
  • Mass number
  • Neutrons protons
  • Isotopes
  • Same atomic number, different mass

17
Building Blocks of Matter (3)
  • Ions
  • One or more net positive or negative electrical
    charges
  • Chemical formula
  • Number and type of each atom or ion
  • Compounds
  • Organic
  • Inorganic

18
Ions and Compounds Important to the Study of
Environmental Science
19
Ions and Compounds Important to the Study of
Environmental Science
20
Organic Compounds
  • Carbon-based compounds
  • Examples
  • Hydrocarbons
  • Chlorinated hydrocarbons
  • Simple carbohydrates
  • Complex carbohydrates
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)

21
Matter Quality
  • Usefulness as a resource
  • Availability
  • Concentration
  • High quality
  • Low quality

22
Examples of Matter Quality
23
Low Quality
High Quality
Solid
Gas
Salt
Solution of salt in water
Coal
Coal-fired power plant emissions
Gasoline
Automobile emissions
Aluminum ore
Aluminum can
Fig. 2-5
24
How Can Matter Change?
  • Concept 2-2B When matter undergoes a physical or
    chemical change, no atoms are created or
    destroyed (the law of conservation of matter).

25
Changes in Matter
  • Physical
  • Chemical

26
Reactant(s)
Product(s)
Energy
Carbon dioxide
Carbon Oxygen

C
O2
Energy
CO2
Energy

Black solid
Colorless gas
Colorless gas
p. 34
27
Nuclear Changes (1)
  • Radioactive decay unstable isotopes
  • Alpha particles
  • Beta particles
  • Gamma rays

28
Nuclear Changes (2)
  • Nuclear fission
  • Large mass isotopes split apart
  • Chain reaction
  • Nuclear fusion
  • Two light isotopes forced together
  • High temperature to start reaction
  • Stars

29
Types of Nuclear Changes
30
Radioactive decay
Radioactive decay occurs when nuclei of unstable
isotopes spontaneously emit fast-moving chunks of
matter (alpha particles or beta particles),
high-energy radiation (gamma rays), or both at a
fixed rate. A particular radioactive isotope may
emit any one or a combination of the three items
shown in the diagram.
Alpha particle (helium-4 nucleus)
Radioactive isotope
Gamma rays
Beta particle (electron)
31
Nuclear fission
Uranium-235
Nuclear fission occurs when the nuclei of certain
isotopes with large mass numbers (such as
uranium-235) are split apart into lighter nuclei
when struck by a neutron and release energy plus
two or three more neutrons. Each neutron can
trigger an additional fission reaction and lead
to a chain reaction, which releases an enormous
amount of energy.
Fission fragment
Energy
Neutron
Energy
Energy
Uranium-235
Fission fragment
Energy
Fig. 2-7
32
Nuclear fusion
Reaction conditions
Fuel
Products
Helium-4 nucleus
Proton
Neutron
Hydrogen-2 (deuterium nucleus)
Nuclear fusion occurs when two isotopes of light
elements, such as hydrogen, are forced together
at extremely high temperatures until they fuse to
form a heavier nucleus and release a tremendous
amount of energy.
100 million C
Energy
Hydrogen-3 (tritium nucleus)
Neutron
Fig. 2-7
33
Law of Conservation of Matter
  • Matter only changes from one form to another
  • There is no throwing away
  • Environmental implications
  • Recycle
  • Reuse
  • Must deal with wastes and pollutants

34
2-3 What Is Energy and How Can It Change Its Form?
  • Concept 2-3A When energy is converted from one
    form to another in a physical or chemical change,
    no energy is created or destroyed (first law of
    thermodynamics).
  • Concept 2-3B Whenever energy is changed from one
    form to another, we end up with lower quality or
    less usable energy than we started with (second
    law of thermodynamics).

35
What Is Energy?
  • Energy the capacity to do work or transfer heat

36
Types of Energy
  • Potential energy stored energy
  • Gasoline
  • Water behind a dam
  • Kinetic energy energy in motion
  • Wind, flowing water, electricity
  • Heat flow from warm to cold
  • Electromagnetic radiation
  • wavelength and relative energy

37
Electromagnetic Radiation
38
Energy Quality
  • High-quality energy concentrated
  • High temperature heat
  • Nuclear fission
  • Concentrated sunlight
  • High-velocity wind
  • Fossil fuels
  • Low-quality energy dispersed
  • Heat in atmosphere and ocean

39
Laws of Conservation of Energy (Thermodynamics)
  • First law of thermodynamics
  • Energy input Energy output
  • Second law of thermodynamics
  • Energy use results in lower-quality energy
  • Dispersed heat loss

40
Consequences of the Second Law of Thermodynamics
(1)
  • Automobiles
  • 6 moves car
  • 94 dissipates as low-quality heat into the
    environment
  • Incandescent light bulb
  • 5 useful light
  • 95 heat

41
Consequences of the Second Law of Thermodynamics
(2)
  • Living systems
  • Energy lost with every conversion

42
Second Law of Thermodynamics and Its Effect on
Living Systems
43
2-4 How Can We Use Matter and Energy More
Sustainably?
  • Concept 2-4A The processes of life must conform
    to the law of conservation of matter and the two
    laws of thermodynamics.
  • Concept 2-4B We can live more sustainably by
    using and wasting less matter and energy,
    recycling and reusing most matter resources, and
    controlling human population growth.

44
High-throughput (High-waste) Economy
  • Increase flow of matter and energy to boost
    economy
  • Environmental capacity?

45
High-throughput Economy
46
Inputs (from environment)
System throughputs
Outputs (into environment)
Low-quality energy (heat)
High-quality energy
High-waste economy
Waste and pollution
High-quality matter
Fig. 2-12
47
Low-throughput (Low-waste) Economy
  • Matter recycling and reuse economy
  • Mimic nature
  • Maximize matter cycling with minimal energy input

48
Low-throughput Economy
49
Outputs (into environment)
System throughputs
Inputs (from environment)
Energy conservation
Low-quality energy (heat)
High-quality energy
Low-waste economy
Waste and pollution prevention
Pollution control
Waste and pollution
High-quality matter
Recycle and reuse
Fig. 2-13
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com