Title: Chapter 2 Standards of Measurement
15
2You can do it.
3Chapter 1Matter and Measurement
4States of Matter
5Solid
6Liquid
7Gas
8Plasma
9(No Transcript)
10Matter
Pure substances (homogeneous composition)
Mixtures of two or more substances
Elements
Compounds
Solutions (homogeneous composition one phase)
Heterogeneous mixtures (two or more
phases)
Figure 3.2 (page 48)
11Classifying Substances
12Mixtures
- Homogeneous
-
-
-
- Heterogeneous
-
-
-
13Pure substance
- A particular kind of matter with a definite,
fixed composition - Elements
- Compounds
14Compounds
- Two or more elements
- New
- Definite
- Can be
15How would you classify?
- Gatorade
- Caesar salad
- Water
- Coffee
- An iron nail
- Air
- Milk
16Methods of Separation
- Do not cause chemical changes
17Filtration
18Sublimation
19Evaporation
20Distillation
21Chromatography
22Decantation
23Crystallization
245
25The Metric SystemThe International System of
Units
- Standards of measurement
- Base units (7) see Table 1.4 pg 14
- MASS
- LENGTH
- TIME
- COUNT, QUANTITY
- TEMPERATURE
- ELECTRIC CURRENT
- LUMINOUS INSTENSITY
26The Metric System
- Derived Units
- AREA
- VOLUME
- ENERGY
- FORCE
- PRESSURE
- POWER
- VOLTAGE
- FREQUENCY
- ELECTRIC CHARGE
27Density
- Common ratio used in chemistry
- Physical property of a substance
-
- D
-
- SI units kg/m3
- Solid
- g/cm3
- Liquid
- g/mL
- Gas
- g/L
Can change due to temperature and/or pressure
changes
28Density
- Find the density of a piece of metal with a
volume of 2.7 cm3 and a mass of 10.8 g. -
2. Determine the mass of an object with a density
of 0.24 g/cm3 and a volume of 2 cm3.
29The Metric System
- Metric Prefixes make base unit larger or
smaller - Table 1.5 pg 14
- Based on 10
- Math method vs. Stairs
30Conversion Practice
- Convert a volume of 12 microliters into
centiliters - Express a distance of 15 meters in kilometers
- Convert 83 cm into meters
- Which is the longer amount of time, 1351 ps or
1.2 ns? - Convert 16 dL into L
31Uncertainty in Measurement
- Why are digits in measurements uncertain?
- Instruments never completely free of flaws
- Always involves estimation
- Choose the right instrument for the job
- May be estimated for you (electronic scales)
- Scale is marked but you estimate the in-between
32Uncertainty in Measurement
- Precision getting the same result again and
again under same conditions - Accuracy close to accepted value
33Significant Digits
- All digits known with certainty plus one final
digit which is uncertain (or estimated) - All non-zeros
- A zero is significant when
- It is
- It is
- A zero is not significant when
- It is
- It is
34Significant Digits - PRACTICE
- How many significant digits?
- 54.23
- 23.00005
- 0.0004
- 35000
- 0.000504
- 45.623200
- 5,000,000
- 4,000,000.1
35Significant Digits - Calculations
- Addition and Subtraction
- Round answer to have final digit in the SAME
PLACE as the last digit in the LEAST ACCURATE
MEASUREMENT - 1.21 5.002 10.
- 34.5 12.45 23.0505
- 186.31 11.1
- 12.0231 3.86
- 0.100012 120.
- 1200 12 15 0.5
36Significant Digits - Calculations
- Multiplication and Division
- The answer has as many sig figs as the number
with the fewest sig figs - 14.8 x 3.1
- 18.2 x 3.0
- 52/1.5
- 321.868783 x 1
- 2400 x 2.123
- 15000/12.354
37Scientific Notation
- Convenient way of writing very large or very
small numbers and showing only significant
figures - Number between 1 10 with a power of ten
- 5120 becomes 5.12 x 103
- Move decimal point in original number to make
number 1-10 - Move left move right -
38Scientific Notation Practice
- 123,000
- 0.000045
- 23.45
- 0.0000000003
- 1,000,000
39Scientific Notation
- Math with
- Use the EE or EXP button on your calculator.
- For example
- (1.25 x 105) (5.25 x 102)
- Keystrokes are
- Or
40Types of Measurements
- Mass
- Expressed in
- Does
- Weight
- Expressed in same units
-
41Types of Measurements
- Volume
- Cubic
- Many instruments to measure
- Temperature
- Kelvin
- Degrees Celsius
- Degress Farenheit
42Conversion Factors
- Enable movement between metric system and
English system - See back cover of book and Appendix III
- Common conversions you should memorize
- 1 inch 2.54 cm
- 1 mile 1.609 km
- 1 kg 2.20 pounds
- 1 mL 1 cm3
- 0 K -273.15 0C
- 0F 1.8(0C) 32
435
44Dimensional Analysis(Problem Solving)
- Remember ALWAYS use UNITS OF MEASUREMENT in
your work!!! - A technique of converting between units
- Same system (metrics)
- Different systems (inches to meters)
- Chemical equations.later chapters
45Dimensional Analysis(Problem Solving)
- Conversion Factors ratio derived from the
equality between 2 different units - 3 feet 1 1 dollar 1
- 1 yard 4 quarters
- CF can be written either way
- 1 minute 1 60 seconds 1
- 60 seconds 1 minute
46Dimensional Analysis(Problem Solving)
unit given unit wanted unit wanted
unit given
Conversion Factor
Example How many liters are in 125.6 gallons?
47Dimensional Analysis(Problem Solving)
Dimensional Analysis(Problem Solving)
How many seconds are in 4.15 hours?
If a student needs 1.5 mL of water, how many cups
does he need?