Title: Matter,%20Solutions,%20and%20Gas%20Laws
1Matter, Solutions, and Gas Laws
Georgia Performance Standard SPS2. Students will
explore the nature of matter, its
classifications, and its system for naming types
of matter.
2Gas Laws
- Charles Law
- The direct proportion of the volume of a gas to
its temperature (in Kelvin) if the pressure is at
STP (standard temperature pressure) - V1/T1 V2/T2
- Boyles Law
- The inverse variation of the volume of a gas with
its pressure if the temperature and the number of
particles are constant - P1V1P2V2
Larger volume, less pressure
smaller volume, pressure goes up
3Matter
- Matter is anything that has mass and takes up
space - When matter is not the same throughout it is
called heterogeneous - A mixture is two or more substances that do not
combine chemically (they keep their own
properties)
4Properties of Matter
- Physical Property- a characteristic of a material
that you can observe without changing its
identity. - Ex.- Color, shape, size, magnetic quality,
malleability, ability to flow
5What are the physical properties of these items?
6- During a Physical Change the internal makeup of a
substance does not change. - Ex.- Freezing, Melting, Boiling, condensing,
cutting into, distillation.
7Distillation
- physical change
- The process of
- separating a mixture
- by its boiling point
- Examples
- Making alcohol, separating petroleum, or salt
water
8Petroleum Fractional Distillation
Oil was formed from the remains of animals and
plants that lived millions of years ago. Over
the years, the remains were covered by layers of
mud. Heat and pressure from these layers helped
the remains turn into what we today call crude
oil . The word "petroleum" means "rock oil" or
"oil from the earth."
Other products made from petroleum include ink,
crayons, bubble gum, dishwashing liquids,
deodorant, eyeglasses, records, tires, ammonia,
and heart valves.
9Other materials made from petroleum
- Solvents Diesel Motor Oil Bearing Grease Ink
Floor Wax Ballpoint Pens Football Cleats
Upholstery Sweaters Boats Insecticides Bicycle
Tires Sports Car Bodies Nail Polish Fishing lures
Dresses Tires Golf Bags Perfumes Cassettes
Dishwasher Tool Boxes Shoe Polish Motorcycle
Helmet Caulking Petroleum Jelly Transparent Tape
CD Player Faucet Washers Antiseptics Clothesline
Curtains Food Preservatives Basketballs Soap
Vitamin Capsules Antihistamines Purses Shoes
Dashboards Cortisone Deodorant Footballs Putty
Dyes Panty Hose Refrigerant Percolators Life
Jackets Rubbing Alcohol Linings Skis TV Cabinets
Shag Rugs Electrician's Tape Tool Racks Car
Battery Cases Epoxy Paint Mops Slacks Insect
Repellent Oil Filters Umbrellas Yarn Fertilizers
Hair Coloring Roofing Toilet Seats Fishing Rods
Lipstick Denture Adhesive Linoleum Ice Cube Trays
Synthetic Rubber Speakers Plastic Wood Electric
Blankets Glycerin Tennis Rackets Rubber Cement
Fishing Boots Dice Nylon Rope Candles Trash Bags
House Paint Water Pipes Hand Lotion Roller Skates
Surf Boards Shampoo Wheels Paint Rollers Shower
Curtains Guitar Strings Luggage Aspirin Safety
Glasses Antifreeze Football Helmets Awnings
Eyeglasses Clothes Toothbrushes Ice Chests
Footballs Combs CD's Paint Brushes Detergents
Vaporizers Balloons Sun Glasses Tents Heart
Valves Crayons Parachutes Telephones Enamel
Pillows Dishes Cameras Anesthetics Artificial
Turf Artificial limbs Bandages Dentures Model
Cars Folding Doors Hair Curlers Cold cream Movie
film Soft Contact lenses Drinking Cups Fan Belts
Car Enamel Shaving Cream Ammonia Refrigerators
Golf Balls Toothpaste Gasoline
10Properties of Matter
- Chemical Property-- describes its "potential" to
undergo some chemical change or reaction because
of its composition. - Chemical properties can only be observed by
changing a substance's chemical properties.
Examples Flammability, Reactivity, etc - Once a chemical change has occurred a NEW
SUBSTANCE OR SUBSTANCES is/are produced with
totally new physical and chemical
characteristics. -
11Examples of Chemical Changes
12Chemical Changes
- Soft, silver metal
- Reacts violently
- with water
- Love it on French
- fries
- Need it to live
13Conservation of Mass
- During a chemical reaction, energy is taken in or
given off - The Law of Conservation of Mass states mass is
neither created or destroyed. - The mass of the reactant(s) is equal to the mass
of the product(s).
14Composition of Matter
- Main Types of Matter
- Pure Substances either elements or compounds.
- Has the same composition throughout
- A. Elements all atoms in the substance are the
same - 90 elements found in nature
- 20 made in laboratories
- Atom is the smallest particle of an element that
still retains the characteristics of that element - Examples copper, gold, hydrogen, carbon
15- Compounds consisting of two or more different
elements bonded together (chemically combined) in
a fixed Mass ratio that can be split into simpler
substances. - Examples water (H20), carbon dioxide (CO2),
sugar (C6H1206), hydrochloric acid (H2S04), - salt (NaCl)
16- 3. Mixtures
- 2 or more materials combined together BUT NOT
CHEMICALLY combined, they still retain their own
chemical makeup. - Unlike compounds,
- mixtures do not always
- contain substances in
- fixed proportions.
Heterogeneous
17Types of Mixtures
- Heterogeneous Mixtures
- A type of mixture in which parts of the mixture
are noticeably different from one another - Usually can pick out the different particles
- Hetero means different
- 2 Main Types
- Suspension
- Mixture
- Examples salad, hotdog, hamburger, marble
18Suspension
- Heterogeneous mixture between liquids or
liquids/solids that will separate out upon
standing. - Examples Italian dressing, pond water, oil and
vinegar
19Types of Mixtures
- Homogeneous Mixture
- a mixture that contains 2 or more gases, liquids
or solids blended consistently throughout. - Hard to pick out individual particles (looks the
same throughout) - Homo means same
- Two Main Types
- Solutions
- Colloids (most of the time)
-
20Solutions
- A homogeneous mixture where one material is
indistinguishable in another - the dissolved particles are so small you cant
see them - Alloy-- a solution of two or more elements,
usually metals. - brass zinc and copper
- stainless steel copper, nickel and iron
- Pewter lead, copper, tin
- White gold nickel, palladium and gold
- Rose gold copper and gold
- Bronze aluminum and copper
21Colloid
- A homogenous mixture that contains some particles
that are larger in size, but still evenly
distributed throughout - Does not settle upon standing unless it has gone
bad (e.g. milk) - Tyndall Effect dispersion of light due to larger
particles causes milky/cloudy color in
colloidscan be used to determine whether
something is a solution or colloid - Example milk, fog, peanut butter, butter,
mayonnaise, yogurt
22Parts of a Solutions
- Solute BEING DISSOLVED the particles dissolved
in the solution - Examples sugar, Koolaid mix, salt
- 2. SolventDOES DISSOLVING the substance in a
solution in which the particles dissolve - Usually water
23Solubility
- The maximum of amount of solute that normally
dissolves in a given amount of solvent at a
certain temperature. - Solubility chart shows how much of a substance
will dissolve at a particular temperature. - Soluble--- will dissolve in
- Salt is soluble in water.
- Sugar is soluble in water.
- Insoluble will NOT dissolve in
- An oil is insoluble in water.
- Ink is insoluble in water.
24Solutions
- Solutions are concentrated when they contain a
lot of solute - Solutions are dilute when they contain a small
amount of solute - Solubility is the ability of a substance to
dissolve
25Rate of Solution
- Stirring- agitating the solution causes solute
particles to come in contact with solvent
particles - Heating- higher temperature increase the movement
of particles to speed dissolving - Increasing Surface Area- More solute comes in
contact with solvent e.g. granulated sugar versus
sugar cubes
26Solubility
- Unsaturated- Solution contains less than the
maximum amount of solute that can dissolve in the
solvent at a given temperature - Saturated- Solution that contains the maximum
amount of solute that can dissolve at a given
temperature - Supersaturated- Solution that contains more
solute that can dissolve at a given temperature - Only stays supersaturated when condition change
e.g. heated then cooled - Otherwise the unusable solute will stay at the
bottom
27Solubility Curves
- A solubility curve is a graph of a solute usually
dissolved in 100 g of water - Water is considered the universal solvent
- Solubility-Ability to dissolve
- Looking at the solubility curve we see that the
type of solute will make a difference in how much
is dissolved. - Solubility the amt of solute that can dissolve
in a solvent (100 mL of water) - SOLUBILITY CURVES ARE
- ALWAYS ON THE GRAD TEST!!!
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30Solubility chart various materials