Title: Ch. 1 Chemistry: An Introduction What is chemistry
1Ch. 1Chemistry An Introduction
- What is chemistry?
- Chemistry is the study of the ___________________
of substances and the
changes they undergo. - It began from _______________... the attempts
of alchemists to change common metals into
_________ through trial and error. - Divisions of Chemistry
- There are several divisions or branches of
chemistry - 1) _________ chemistry the study of substances
that contain ________ - Example how gasoline is produced from oil
- 2) _______________ chemistry the study of
substances __________ - ___________
- Example how table salt reacts with different
acids
composition
alchemy
gold
Organic
carbon
Inorganic
without
carbon
2Divisions of Chemistry (continued)
- 3) _______________ chemistry the study of the
_______________ composition of substances - Example how much chlorine is in a sample of
tap water - 4) ____________________ the study of the
chemistry of _________ __________________ - Example how sugar in the blood stream of cats
affect insulin production
Analytical
quantitative
Biochemistry
living
organisms
3(No Transcript)
4The Scientific Method
- The scientific method is way to solve a
scientific problem. It is an approach to a
solution (using mostly common sense.) - Example Your flashlight doesnt work. (Not
necessarily a scientific problem.) - Steps to the Scientific Method
- (1) Make _________________-- Use your 5 senses to
gather information. - (2) Propose a ______________-- Make an educated
guess for what is happening. - (3) Perform _______________-- This tests your
hypothesis. Many experiments are sometimes
needed to test a hypothesis. The same experiment
must give similar results if the experiment is
to be reliable.
observations
hypothesis
experiments
5Steps to the Scientific Method (continued)
- (4) Make a _____________-- This should explain
the results of your experiments. Theories may
___________ or be ___________ over time because
of results from new experiments. - Scientific Laws
- Laws describe ____________ ___________________.
- A law tells what happens. It does not attempt to
explain _____ the phenomena occurs. (That is the
job of a theory.) - Laws can often be summarized by a _____________
__________. - Example PV nRT (The _________ ______
______) This equation is used in Ch.
12. The law shows the relationship
between the pressure, volume and
temperature of a given quantity of gas in a
container.
theory
change
rejected
natural
phenomena
why
math
equation
Ideal Gas Law
6Chapter 2--Matter Change
- Matter vs. Mass
- Matter is anything that has _________ and takes
up ___________. - Examples ________, __________, and ________...
(the three phases of matter) - Things that are NOT matter __________, heat,
________, sound... - Mass is the amount of ___________ in an object.
- The standard metric unit for mass is the
______________.
mass
space
solids
liquids
gases
light
emotions
matter
kilogram
7Plasma
- Plasma is a high energy electrically charged
mixture of ions and electrons. __________ are
made of plasma. - While plasma is the most abundant phase of matter
in the universe, on earth it only occurs in a few
limited places - Lightning bolts
- Flames
- Fluorescent lights
- Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights)
Stars
8Bose-Einstein Condensate
- Predicted in 1924 and created in 1995, the BEC is
a small group of atoms clumped together when
taken down to a few billionths of a degree above
absolute zero. - This group of atoms takes up the same place,
creating a "super atom." There are no longer
thousands of separate atoms. - They all take on the same qualities and for our
purposes become one blob.
Einstein
Bose
http//www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/bec/
400 nanoKelvins 200 nK 50 nK
9States of Matter
YES
YES
NO
NO
YES
NO
NO
NO
YES
- Particle Motion
- Solids-- particles ____________ back and forth in
fixed positions - Liquids-- clumps of particles ______ past each
other in the container - Gases-- individual particles _____ all over the
place and collide - _________ is a term used for a gaseous substance
that is normally a ________ or _______ at room
temperature.) - Example _______ vapor
vibrate
slide
fly
Vapor
solid
liquid
water
10States of Matter
11Physical Properties and Physical Changes
- Physical properties can be determined/measured
without changing the substances composition. - Examples _______, odor, __________, mass,
________, _________ point, ____________
point, hardness, solubility,
etc. - Physical Changes alter a substance without
changing its composition. - Examples crushing, ripping, breaking, and any
_________ changes(boiling, freezing,
melting, etc.) - Most physical changes just alter the size of the
particles and are usually reversible.
taste
color
density
melting
boiling
phase
12Physical Properties
13Physical Changes Names of the Phase Changes
Solid
Gas
Liquid
Solid?Aqueous ___________ Aqueous ?
Solid ___________
dissolving
crystallizing
14Mixtures
- Mixtures are a physical blend of two or more
substances mixed together. The parts can be
separated by _____________ means or ____________
changes. - There are 2 types of mixtures
- (1) _________________ Mixtures the parts mixed
together can still be distinguished from one
another...NOT uniform in composition. - Examples chicken soup, fruit salad, _____,
sand in water - (2) _________________ Mixtures the parts mixed
together cannot be distinguished from one
another...completely uniform in composition. - Examples ______, Kool-aid, ________, salt
water, milk - Another term for a homogeneous mixture is a
______________.
physical
physical
Heterogeneous
dirt
Homogeneous
Air
Brass
solution
15Heterogeneous Mixtures
16Homogeneous Mixtures
17Distillation
- One way to separate a _________ from a
___________ in a solution is by distillation.
There are 2 steps to the process - Step 1 _________ the solution.
- Step 2 ________________ the vapor as is escapes
and collect it. - Distillation Animation
solid
liquid
Boil
Condense
18Chemical Properties and Chemical Changes
- Chemical properties cannot be determined/measured
without changing the substances composition - Examples ____________, whether or not it
reacts with an acid or a base. - Chemical Changes
- Chemical changes will alter a substance and
change its composition. - Examples burning, ___________, rotting or
decomposing,
__________________, and other chemical
reactions. - Most, but not all, chemical changes are
irreversible. - You cant reverse the burning of paper.
- _____________ ____________ use a reversible
chemical reaction
burning
rusting
fermenting
Rechargeable batteries
19Indications of Chemical Reactions
1) ________ is produced (________) 2)
________ is produced (_____________
bugs/_____________) 3) ______________ is
produced (______________)
matches
Heat
lightning
fireflies
Light
Electricity
batteries
20Indications of Chemical Reactions
4) ___________________ forms (_______
________) 5) gas/smoke/odor/bubbles
produced (________ ______)
soap scum
Precipitate
Two liquids chemically react to form a solid.
soda fizz
21Elements vs. Compounds
- An element cannot be ___________ down or
_____________ into simpler substances by chemical
means. - Elements are the _________ forms of matter that
can exists in normal laboratory conditions. - Examples _______, Helium, __________
- A compound is made up of ____ or ________
different elements ______________ bonded
together. - Compounds can only be broken down into simpler
substances by ____________ ____________. - Examples _______, Sand, _______________
broken
changed
simplest
Mercury
Gold
2
more
chemically
chemical reactions
Water
NaCl (table salt)
22Classification of Matter
23Classification of Matter
24Classification of Matter
25Chemical Symbols
- Chemists use chemical symbols for the elements
involved in a chemical reaction. The symbols are
a shorthand way of representing the
______________. (See the Periodic Table for a
list of all the symbols.) - The first letter of the chemical symbol for an
element is always _________________. - The next letter, if needed, is _______________.
Each capital letter in a formula, therefore,
represents another element. - Examples ____, ____, Hg, ___, NaBr, ________,
LiC2H3O2 - Some symbols come from _______ names AuAurum
(Gold)
elements
capitalized
lowercase
H
Ne
S
H2O
Latin
26Chemical Reactions
- When writing chemical reactions, the substances
that ___________ with each other are written on
the _______ and are called reactants. - The substances that are ____________ are written
on the _______ and are called the products. - Reactants ? Products
- The ? symbol can be read as _______ or
reacts to produce. - Example 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O
- which means ____________________________________
- ________________________________________________.
react
left
produced
right
yields
two hydrogen molecules
plus one oxygen
molecule
yields
two water molecules
27Conservation of Mass
- During chemical (or physical) reactions, mass (or
matter) is neither _____________ nor
_________________. - The mass of all the reactants _________ the mass
of all the products. - The ___________ of each kind of atom is the same.
- Sometimes it appears that the reactant and
product masses are not equal, but a _______ was
probably a reactant or product in the reaction,
and that is making the difference! - Example 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O
- If 4 grams of hydrogen reacted with oxygen to
produce 36 grams of water, how many grams of
oxygen were used? _______ - Notice that the ____ of Hs and Os on each side
is __________!
created
destroyed
equals
number
gas
32
constant
28Conservation of Mass
CaCl2 Na2SO4 ? CaSO4 2NaCl
mass before mass after atoms before atoms
after