Title: Honors Chemistry
1Honors Chemistry
- Chapter 1
- The Study of Change
21.1 1.2 Chemistry
- The study of matter and the changes it undergoes
- Structure and properties of matter
- Macroscopic vs Microscopic
- Structure (microscopic) determines properties
(macroscopic)
31.3 Scientific Method
- Systematic approach to research
- Based on data gathered by observation
- Qualitative general observations
- Quantitative numeric data
- Evolution of ideas
- Hypothesis tentative explanation testable
- Theory unifying principle that explains
observations - Scientific Law mathematical relationship
41.4 Classification of Matter
- Matter anything with mass and volume
- Substance matter with definite composition and
distinct properties - Element cannot be separated into simpler
substances (ie, only one type of atom present) - Examples aluminum, gold, sulfur, oxygen, neon
- Compound two or more elements chemically
combined in fixed proportions - Examples water, sulfuric acid, rust, baking soda
51.4 Classification of Matter
- Mixture combination of two or more substances
which retain their identities - Homogeneous mixture composition of mixture is
uniform throughout - Examples saltwater, air, metal alloys
- Heterogeneous mixture composition is not
uniform phase boundaries - Examples salt and pepper, oil and water, salad
dressing
61.4 Classification of Matter
71.5 States of Matter
sublimation
vaporizing
melting
solid
liquid
gas
condensing
freezing
deposition
81.6 Properties of Matter
- Physical property
- can be observed without changing the identity of
the substance - Physical change
- remains the same substance
- Extensive property
- Depends only on the amount of matter present
- Intensive property
- Depends on the type of matter present
91.6 Properties of Matter
- Chemical property
- Property involving reactions with other
substances - Chemical change
- New substance is produced
- Classify the following properties
- Color, mass, flammability, solubility, density
- Classify the following changes
- Rusting, cutting, melting, burning, dissolving
101.7 SI Units
- Système Internationale dUnites
- International System of Units
Base quantity Name Symbol
length meter m
mass kilogram kg
time second s
electric current ampere A
temperature kelvin K
amount of substance mole mol
luminous intensity candela cd
111.7 SI Conversions
Factor Name Symbol
1024 yotta Y
1021 zetta Z
1018 exa E
1015 peta P
1012 tera T
109 giga G
106 mega M
103 kilo k
102 hecto h
101 deka da
Factor Name Symbol
10-1 deci d
10-2 centi c
10-3 milli m
10-6 micro µ
10-9 nano n
10-12 pico p
10-15 femto f
10-18 atto a
10-21 zepto z
10-24 yocto y
121.7 SI Conversions
m
unit
m
c
d
M
G
T
p
n
da
h
k
3 decimal places
3 decimal places
1 decimal place
Multiply number of decimal places by the
dimensionality of the unit
Some Practice
0.173
25 000
17.3 cm ______ m
0.025 kg ______ mg
986
0.000 058 7
0.986 dm3 ______ cm3
587 nm __________ cm
131.7 Derived Units
- Mathematical combinations of base units
- Area Alw m?m m2
- Volume V lwh m ? m ? m m3
- dm3 Liter cm3 mL
- Density r m/V kg/m3, g/cm3, g/mL
- Mass vs. Weight
- Mass amount of matter kg
- Weight force of gravity N
141.7 Temperature Scales
Fahrenheit
Celsius
Kelvin
Boiling Point
212oF
100oC
373.15 K
Human bodytemp 100oF
Freezing Point
32oF
0oC
273.15 K
Coldest temp in lab 0oF
Absolute Zero
-460oF
-273.15oC
0 K
151.7 Temperature Conversions
- Celsius-Kelvin offset by 273.15o
- K oC 273.15
- oC K 273.15
- Celsius-Fahrenheit
- Offset by 32oF
- Different sized degrees 9Fo 5Co
- oC 5/9 (oF - 32)
- oF 9/5 oC 32
- Convert 98.6oF to oC and to K
161.8 Scientific Notation
- m x 10n
- 1 m lt 10
- Exponentiation ? multiply exponents
- Multiplication ? Add exponents
- Division ? Subtract exponents
- Addition/Subtraction ? must have same exponent
171.8 Significant Digits
Digits which were actually measured, as opposed
to placeholder zeroes
Consider...how long is the blue rectangle?
1
2
3
4
5
cm
Estimate the next digit
Read 2 cm
2.4 cm 0.1 cm
Lets use a better ruler
uncertainty in measurement dx
measurement x
Now how long is the rectangle?
2.43 cm 0.01 cm
Implied 1 on last digit of all measurements
unless told otherwise
181.8 Significant Digits
- Rules of thumb to deal with calculations
involving significant digits - Addition/Subtraction
- Round to the decimal place of the least precise
value - Multiplication/Division
- Round to the number of digits of the least
precise value - Answers must be rounded properly!
191.8 Relative Error
- Compare uncertainty to measurement
- dx RE ------ x
- Often expressed as a percent
- With laboratory data, dx is found by comparing
experimental result to theoretical expectations - xth xexp RE ---------------
xth
201.8 Accuracy and Precision
- Accuracy
- how close a measurement is to the correct value
- How close were you to the bulls eye?
- Precision
- how closely a set of values agree with each other
- Were your shots clustered or scattered?
- Lets measure the bp of water 3 times
- Accurate but not precise 96oC, 101oC, 104oC
- Precise but not accurate 57.2oC, 56.8oC, 57.1oC
211.9 Dimensional Analysis
- Technique for solving problems by treating units
of measure as algebraic quantities - Set up conversion factors
- 18 in __________ ft
- We know 1 ft 12 in
- 18 in 1 ft------- x -------- 1
12 in
1.5 ft
221.9 Dimensional Analysis
- Convert the speed of light (3.00 x 108 m/s) to
miles / hour. - 3.00 x 108 m 1 km 1 mile 3600
s------------------ x ---------- x ---------- x
-------- 1 s 1000 m 1.6 km
1 hr - 6.8 x 108 mi/hr
- 2 sig dig because of km mile conversion
- That wasnt so bad, was it?