Title: Chemistry: The Study of Change
1Chemistry The Study of Change
2CHEMISTRY
- The study of matter and the changes it undergoes.
3UNITS
Table 1.2 SI Base Units Table 1.2 SI Base Units Table 1.2 SI Base Units
Base Quantity Name of Unit Symbol
Length meter m
Mass kilogram kg
Time second s
Temperature kelvin K
Amount of substance mole mol
4PREFIXES
Prefix Symbol Meaning
Tera- T 1012
Giga- G 109
Mega- M 106
Kilo- k 103
Hecto- h 102
Deca- da 101
Deci- d 10-1
Centi- c 10-2
Milli- m 10-3
Micro- m 10-6
Nano- n 10-9
Pico- p 10-12
5SCIENTIFIC NOTATION
N is a number between 1 and 10
n is a positive or negative integer
N x 10n
6.022 x 1023
1.99 x 10-23
6SCIENTIFIC NOTATION
568.762
0.00000772
n gt 0
n lt 0
568.762 5.68762 x 102
0.00000772 7.72 x 10-6
7Making Measurements
8SIGNIFICANT FIGURES
9Once you start the counting dont stop!
10SIGNIFICANT FIGURES
- Rule 1
- Every nonzero digit in a measurement is
significant. - Examples 24.7 0.22 569
- Rule 2
- Zeros appearing between nonzero digits are
significant. - Examples 7003 60.8 0.502
- Rule 3
- A ZERO is NOT significant when it is a
placeholder. A placeholder is used to show the
location of the decimal point. - Examples .00099 5280 700
11SIG FIGS CONT.
- Rule 4
- Zeros at the end of a number and to the right of
a decimal point are always significant. - Examples 86.0 46.00 1.010
- Rule 5
- When a number is counted or defined within a
system of measurement, there is an infinite
amount of significant digits. - Examples 11 students 100 cm 1 m
12COUNT THE SIG FIGS
24 mL
3001 g
0.0320 m3
6.4 x 104 molecules
560 kg
13SIG FIGS Addition and Subtraction
The answer cannot have more digits to the right
of the decimal point than any of the original
numbers.
14SIG FIGS Multiplication and Division
The number of significant figures in the result
is set by the original number that has the
smallest number of significant figures
4.51 x 3.6666 16.536366
_______
6.8 112.04 0.0606926
_______
15FACTOR LABEL METHOD
- Determine which unit conversion factor(s) are
needed - Carry units through calculation
- If all units cancel except for the desired
unit(s), then the problem was solved correctly.
How many mL are in 1.63 L?
1 L 1000 mL
16The speed of sound in air is about 343 m/s.
What is this speed in miles per hour?
1 mi 1609 m
meters to miles
seconds to hours
1 min 60 s
1 hour 60 min
17Important things to consider when solving
problems and performing experiments.
18Volume SI derived unit for volume is cubic
meter (m3)
1 L 1000 mL 1000 cm3 1 dm3
1 mL 1 cm3
19Matter - anything that occupies space and has
mass.
mass measure of the quantity of matter SI unit
of mass is the kilogram (kg)
weight force that gravity exerts on an object
20Density SI derived unit for density is kg/m3
1 g/cm3 1 g/mL 1000 kg/m3
For Water 1g/mL
m d x V
21.5 g/cm3 x 4.49 cm3 96.5 g
21K 0C 273.15
273 K 0 0C 373 K 100 0C
32 0F 0 0C 212 0F 100 0C
22Convert 172.9 0F to degrees Celsius.
23Graphing
Distance vs. Time
Line of Best Fit
Dependent Variable
Independent Variable
24Accuracy how close a measurement is to the true
value Precision how close a set of measurements
are to each other
25Percents and Percent Error
Measured Value
- Accepted Value
X 100
Accepted Value
Example The mass of a compound measured in a lab
was 25.0 grams. The accepted value for this
compound is 24.5 grams. Calculate the percent
error.
- 24.5 g
25.0 g
X 100
2.04
24.5 g
26Scientific Method
27SCIENTIFIC METHOD
- logical approach to solving problems
- Observation
- Problem
- Hypothesis
- Experiment
- Data
- Analysis
- Conclusion
28You have 15 seconds to count how many letter Fs
you see in the following statement.
29FEATURE FILMS ARE THE RESULT OF YEARS OF
SCIENTIFIC STUDY COMBINED WITH THE EXPERIENCES OF
YEARS.
30Observations
- Qualitative quality, non-numeric terms
- Quantitative quantity, numerical description
31How observant are you?!?
32MATTER
- Matter anything that occupies space and has mass
33State of Matter Volume Shape Density Compressibility Motion of Molecules
Gas
Liquid
Solid
34Three States of Matter
Plasma
35Phase Changes
liquid
gas
solid
36phase diagram summarizes the conditions at which
a substance exists as a solid, liquid, or gas.
Phase Diagram of Water
37Phase Diagram Points
- critical point
- above this point a substance becomes a
supercritical fluid - critical temperature (Tc) temperature above
which the gas cannot be made to liquefy, no
matter how great the applied pressure. - critical pressure (Pc) minimum pressure that
must be applied to bring about liquefaction at
the critical temperature. - triple point
- point at which all three phases coexist
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39Classification of Matter
- Pure Substance form of matter that has a
definite composition and distinct properties - 2. Mixture combination of two or more substances
in which the substances retain their own
identities.
water, ammonia, sucrose, gold, oxygen
- mixed together physically
- can usually be separated
40Types of Mixtures
- Homogenous mixture composition of the mixture
is the same throughout.
- Heterogeneous mixture composition is not
uniform throughout.
1.4
41Mixture Pictures
42Types of Mixtures
- solution mixture that remains uniformly mixed
- solute part of the mixture that gets dissolved
- solvent part of the mixture that does the
dissolving - suspension mixture where visible particles
settle - colloid mixture where particles are unevenly
distributed but do not separate, positive Tyndall
Effect
43 Hom/Het? Soln/Susp/Coll?
- Fog ____________ ___________
- Paint ____________ ___________
- Syrup ____________ ___________
44Physical means can be used to separate a mixture
into its pure components.
1.4
45Methods of Separation
PASTA/WATER
SAND/IRON FILINGS
- Strainer
- Filtration
- Physical
- Evaporation
- Centrifuge
- Distillation
SALT /WATER
SAND/WATER
BLOOD
FOOD COLORING/WATER
46- Element
- all atoms are the same
- cannot be broken down by physical or chemical
means - 114 elements named on the Periodic Table
- 83 elements occur naturally on Earth
- gold, aluminum, lead, oxygen, carbon
- many elements have been created by scientists
- technetium, americium, seaborgium
47- Compound
- 2 or more elements combined
- Cannot be broken down by physical means
- Can be broken down by chemical means
- Appears different from original elements
- Fixed ratios in definite proportions
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49PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL CHANGES
50Physical Properties and Physical Changes
- physical property characteristic that can be
observed or measured without changing the
identity of the substance. - melting point, boiling point, density
- physical change change in a substance that does
not involve a change in the identity of the
substance. - grinding, cutting, melting, and boiling
51Physical Properties
- Intensive INDEPENDENT of amount of matter
present (sample size) - Example density, color, melting point
- Extensive DEPENDENT on the amount of matter
present (sample size) - Example mass, length, volume
52Chemical Properties and Chemical Changes
- chemical property a substances ability to
undergo changes that transform it into different
substances - Example combustibility, reactivity
- chemical change change in which one or more
substances are converted into different
substances - Example rusting, cooking food
-
53Evidence of a Chemical Change
- Color change
- Temperature change
- Production of a gas
- Change in odor
- Formation of a precipitate
- Precipitate insoluble solid that separates out
of solution
54Physical or Chemical?
hydrogen gas burns in oxygen gas to form water
Remember
physical change does not alter the composition or
identity of a substance.
chemical change alters the composition or
identity of the substance(s) involved.