Title: Quantitative vs. Qualitative
1Quantitative vs. Qualitative
- Make a quantitative observation about your
textbook - Make a qualitative observation about your textbook
2Quantitative vs. Qualitative
- Quantitative observation
- Qualitative observation
3Precision vs. Accuracy
4Precision vs. Accuracy
- Which is more precise for measuring volume, a
beaker or a graduated cylinder?
5Precision vs. Accuracy
- Accuracy refers to the closeness of
measurements to the correct or accepted value of
the quantity measured. - Precision refers to the closeness of a set of
measurements of the same quantitiy made in the
same way.
6Precision vs. Accuracy
- Measured values that are accurate are close to
the accepted value - Measured values that are precise are close to one
another but not necessarily close to the accepted
value
7Darts within small area High precision
Area covered on bulls-eye High accuracy
8Darts within small area High precision
Area far from bulls-eye Low accuracy
9Darts within large area Low precision
Area far from bulls-eye Low accuracy
10Darts within large area Low precision
Area centered around bulls-eye High accuracy
(on average)
11Unit conversions
- Copy metric conversion from book
12Unit Conversions
- Practice problems
- 750 km __________m?
-
- 283 m __________km
-
- 112 Mwatt __________Kwatt?
-
- 112 Mwatt __________Gwatt
13Scientific Notation Significant Figures
14Unit Estimation
15Scientific Notation
- Used to make numbers more usable
- 1,000,000,000 1x109
- 0.00000000011x10-10
16How do you figure this out?
- You move the decimal until you have only one
digit in front of the decimal. - If you move right, then the exponent will be
NEGATIVE based on the number of places your
decimal moved. - If you move left, then the exponent will be
POSITIVE based on the number of places your
decimal moved.
17Practice
- Give the following in scientific notation
- 6,289,030,987
- 0.004500678
- 5.60987
- 568.2365400
- 35.98340002
- 0.23476
18Give the following inscientific notation
- Practice
- 6,289,030,987
- 0.004500678
- 5.60987
- 568.2365400
- 35.98340002
- 0.23476
- 6.289030987x109
- 4.500678x10-3
- 5.60987
- 5.682365400x102
- 3.59834002x10
- 2.3476x10-1
19Going the other way
- 1.3487x105
- 4.9800456x104
- 2.345x101
- 5.6789x10-3
- 3.591x10-1
- 2.0080x10-2
- 134,870
- 49,800.456
- 23.45
- 0.0056789
- 0.3591
- 0.020080
20Try For Yourself
- 7.234x10-5?
- 8.234x103?
- 5.000x10-4?
- 9.99998x10-2?
- 8.555x106?
21ANSWERS
7.234x10-5 0.000 072 34 8.234x103
8,234 5.000x10-4 0.000 500 0 9.99998x10-2
0.099 999 8 8.555x106 8,555,000
22Significant Digits - What is it?
- When we take measurements in science, we can only
be sure of our numbers to a certain point - The numbers we are sure of are called significant
digits or significant figures (sig figs)
23Sig Figs - How do we use them?
- Two types
- Measured
- You actually measure and record your answer to a
certain digit - Calculated
- You use already measured numbers to compute an
answer
24Measured Sig Figs
- Questions you can answer
- How long is your book?
- Measure it with a meterstick and read the length.
- What is the mass of an orange?
- Put it on a scale and read the mass.
- How much milk is in the carton?
- Pour the milk into a graduated cylinder and read
the volume.
25Calculated Sig Figs
- Sometimes, youve collected the data and you need
to calculate a final answer - Example - you find the length, width and height
of your book and you want to find the volume. - You need to multiply the three numbers together
to get an answer.
26Determining what countsSig Fig Rules!
- All non-zero numbers are significant
- Example 1,2,3,,9
- All zeros between non-zero numbers are
significant - Example 1080.305
- All zeros before a written decimal are
significant - Example 600.
27More Rules
- All zeros following non-zero numbers, after a
decimal are significant - Example 1.00 0.003470030
- These rules are to determine what counts when you
are looking at a number.
28Practice
- How many sig figs are in the following numbers?
- 2.341
- 0.0004580
- 560
- 560.
- 560.0003
29Answers
- 2.341 has 4 sig figs
- All the numbers are non-zero digits, so they all
count!
30Answers
- 0.0004580 has 4 sig figs
- The three non-zero numbers 458 and the zero
following this set - The first four zeros are place holders - they get
the 4 into ten thousands place
31Answers
- Another way to think about 0.0004580 having four
sig figs is to write it in scientific notation - 0.00045804.580x10-4
- When you write in scientific notation, you only
write the sig figs before you write the
x10whatever - So here you see that you wrote the 4, 5, 8, and
0. Those are the sig figs!
32Answers
- 560 has 2 sig figs
- This one is tricky. Notice that there is no
decimal, so the zero is just a place holder to
get the 6 into the tens spot.
33Answers
- 560. Has 3 sig figs.
- This time the zero counts because the decimal
means it was actually measured.
34Answers
- 560.0003 has 7 sig figs
- All zeros are between non-zero digits, so they
are all significant.
35How do you know when to stop?
- When youre measuring, you know when to stop
based on your equipment. - If your equipment reads to the tens, then you can
guess up to one more place. You can read to the
ones - Lets look at it.
36Multi step calculations
- Keep One Extra Digit in Intermediate Answers
- When doing multi-step calculations, keep at least
one more significant digit in intermediate
results than needed in your final answer. - For instance, if a final answer requires two
significant digits, then carry at least three
significant digits in calculations. If you
round-off all your intermediate answers to only
two digits, you are discarding the information
contained in the third digit, and as a result the
second digit in your final answer might be
incorrect. (This phenomenon is known as
"round-off error.")
372 Greatest Sins in Sig Figs
- Writing more digits in an answer (intermediate or
final) than justified by the number of digits in
the data. - Rounding-off, say, to two digits in an
intermediate answer, and then writing three
digits in the final answer.
38Reading the right number of digits.
- Ruler/Meterstick
- Graduated Cylinder
- Beaker
- Scale
39Calculations - The rules!!!
- Addition/Subtraction
- Your answer should have the same number of
decimal places as the number with the least
number of decimal places - Multiplication/Division
- Your answer should have the same number of sig
figs as the number with the least number of sig
figs - Always follow the order of operations!
40Practice
- 2.786 3.5
- 0.0004 x 3001
- 65 45.32 x 90
- 45.6 - 34.23
- 900.3/30.2450
41Percent Error
- Percent error determines how accurate an
experimental value is compared quantitatively
with the correct or accepted value. - Percent error calculated by subtracting the
experimental value from the accepted value,
dividing the difference by the accepted value,
and then multiplying by 100
42Percent Error
- Percent error Valueaccepted Valueexperimental
x 100 - Valueaccepted
- Percent error can have a positive or negative
value
43Percent Error
- A student measures the mass and volume of a
substance and calculates its density as 1.40
g/mL. The correct, or accepted value of the
density is 1.36 g/mL. What is the percent error
of the students measurement? - 1.36g/mL 1.40 g/mL x 100 -2.9
- 1.36 g/mL
44Percent Error
- What is your percent error from the lab when you
found the density of water? - 1.00g/mL g/mL x 100 -2.9
- 1.00 g/mL
Your experimental value
45Percent Error pg. 45
- Two technicians independently measure the density
of a new substance. - Technician A Records 2.000, 1.999, 2.001 g/mL
- Technician B Records 2.5, 2.9, and 2.7 g/mL
- The correct value is found to be 2.701 g/mL.
- Which Technician is more precise? Which is more
accurate?
B
A
46Go Through Answers on Packet
47Directly Proportional
- Two quantities are directly proportional if
- Dividing one by the other gives a constant value
- y/x k
- k constant
- You can rearrange above equation by saying y
kx - If one increasesthe other increases at the same
rate (doubling one constant doubles the othr - 2y/2x k (constant)
48Directly Proportional
All directly proportional relationships produce
linear graphs that pass through the origin
49Inverse Proportions
- Two quantities are inversely proportional if
- Their product is constant
- xy k
- k constant
- The greater the speed less time to travel a
given distance - Double speed (2x) ½ required time
- Halving the speed (½) 2 times the time
50Inverse Proportional
51How Sweet It IsChemistry Lab
52How Sweet It Is Lab
- Benedicts Solution Water Bath Test
- Results
- Beverages should have tested positive if they had
a sugar sweetener - Beverages should test negative if they had an
artificial sweetener
53How Sweet It Is Lab
- What beverages tested positive?
- What beverages tested negative?
- Evaluate against labels on Sodas
54How Sweet It Is Lab
- What did you notice about the densities of the
solutions? - Which ones had artificial sweeteners? Densities
less than one? - Which ones had natural sugar sweeteners?
Densities more than one?
55How Sweet It Is Lab
- Analysis Questions
- 1. Evaluate the results against the labels on
the soda? Record actual sweeteners on a table in
your lab write-up. - How accurate were your results?
56How Sweet It Is Lab
- Analysis Questions
- 2. Which sample do you think had the
highest/lowest sugar content? Explain why you
think this.
57How Sweet It Is Lab
- Application Questions
- 1. How could you prove that carbonated water
contains no sweetener?
58How Sweet It Is Lab
- Application Questions
- How could you determine a regular/diet soda by
using density and not opening the can? - Immerse in waterwhich one will sinkwhich one
will float?