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Chemistry Notes.

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Presentation on theme: "Chemistry Notes."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chemistry Notes

2 Matter Matter consists of chemical elements-anything which occupies space and has mass. Matter is found in two ways; pure-form or compounds The Greeks first proposed four elements that made matter; earth, air, fire, and water. Scientists later discovered 92 naturally occurring elements They can be man-made or naturally occurring Two or more elements may combine to form compounds They can be found naturally in three ways called phases; solid, liquid, and gas

3 All matter is made of atoms.
Antimony atoms

4 Atoms have a nucleus of protons (+) and neutrons (o)

5 Electrons are distributed outside the nucleus in energy levels called orbitals (or shells).

6 The mass number = the number of protons + neutrons.

7 The atomic number = the number of protons
This also equals the number of electrons.

8 Atoms Movie

9 Element Nursery All materials are made from elements. All known elements are listed on the periodic table. April 2003 ~ The Omega Nebula is a center of star formation. It is 5500 light years away, and contains vast amounts of hydrogen, oxygen, and sulfur. Elements are formed through nuclear fusion.

10 An element is a substance made up of only a single type of atom.
Gold (Au) and Copper (Cu) Diamond is made of only carbon (C) atoms.

11 Elements There are 92 known elements (naturally occurring)
These elements are found on the periodic table of the elements Some different elements combine together to form compounds Table salt is a compound made up of sodium and chlorine It is written using the abbreviation NaCl Na = Sodium and Cl = chlorine The 92 elements are found on the periodic table of the elements

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13 Symbols for Elements Symbols are letters that represent the elements on the periodic table 1. If only a single letter, it is Capitalized. 2. If two letters, the 1st is Capitalized and the 2nd is lower case. Example: Ca not CA

14 Periodic Table of the Elements
Check out the initials for Aluminum in this example off of the Periodic Table: 13 Al

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16 Periodic Table of the Elements
The number of protons in an atom is listed above each abbreviation. It is called the Atomic Number. 13 Al

17 Periodic Table of the Elements
The number listed underneath the abbreviation is the Atomic Weight. 13 Al

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19 Atoms and Molecules

20 Atomic Structure The atom is the smallest unit to have properties of an element About one million fit onto a period at the end of a sentence They are comprised of neutrons, protons, and electrons Neutrons and protons are neatly packed in the nucleus Neutrons and Protons have almost exactly the same mass Each one has the mass of ~1.7 x grams Electrons are 1/2000 the size of + and N The number of protons unique to an element is the atomic number

21 Atomic Particles

22 What is matter?

23 Matter Anything that takes up space and has mass.
Matter can have physical and chemical properties Physical properties: density, melting points, boiling points, freezing points, colors or smells. Chemical properties: the way an element combines with others.

24 States of matter Four main states of matter
Solid Liquid Gas Plasma Matter may change “phases” when physical forces are present Example: temperature causes matter to move to a more excited state

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26 If energy is added or taken away, matter changes phases

27 Solids Solids can be composed of many different things
For example: mixtures, different elements, or compounds. Solids hold their own shape Atoms inside a solid are not allowed to move around a lot- they are trapped inside their spaces                                   

28 When does a liquid become a solid?
Freezing point is the point at which a liquid becomes a solid. Many factors affect freezing points: Temperature Pressure- easier to freeze at higher temps.

29 Liquid Basics Liquids are an in-between phase (between solid and gas)
Liquids fill the shape of a container Liquids are hard to compress (atoms are already so close together)

30 Becoming a liquid When a solid reaches it’s melting point, it becomes a liquid. It just needs energy (heat)

31 Becoming a liquid For a gas to become liquid, it needs to lose energy. How? Easy- lowering the temperature allows atoms to move slower, thus settling down allowing it to reach it’s condensation point. Gas becomes a liquid at it’s condensation point.

32 Evaporation Liquid may undergo evaporation and become a gas.
All liquids can evaporate at room temperature and pressure. What is evaporation? Evaporation is when atoms escape the liquid and become a gas.

33 Gas Gases are random groups of atoms.
Gases contain a lot of energy; atoms are in constant motion Atoms in gases are really spread out Gases can fill a container of any size or shape- atoms and molecules spread out evenly

34 Becoming a gas… Becoming a gas needs energy (temperature increase)
When energy is added, the atoms become excited

35 Plasma Plasma is like a gas, but the atoms are made up of free electrons and ions. Plasmas are not common on Earth, however you may have seen plasma. Northern lights or lightning

36 Becoming plasma When electrons are stripped from atoms, what is left is negative and positively charged particles (ions) When ions are in equal concentrations, the charge is neutral. Lots of energy is needed to change a gas into plasma.

37 Becoming plasma Adding large amounts of energy causes the neutral atoms to break apart into positive and negative charged ions and free electrons Leaving electrons and ions is a gaseous ball!

38 Isotopes Atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes. In the drawing there are 2 different Helium isotopes; one with 3 neutrons and one with 4 neutrons

39 Ions When an atom gains an extra electron or looses an electron the atom is called an ion. There can be (+) ions or (-) ions

40 Mixtures Substances held together by physical forces.
Mixtures are all around us- oceans, rocks, tap water… everywhere! Tap water has other substances dissolved in it Just H2O molecules If you boiled the tap water, you would have the dissolved substances left over (salt for example). Salt would maintain it’s own properties. If you wanted to boil away salt you would need higher temps.

41 Mixtures Substances in mixtures can always be separated by physical means. Example: mixture of sand, salt and water How would you separate the substances?

42 Solutions Solutions are groups of molecules that are mixed up in a completely even distribution. Homogenous (homo = same) Example: Sugar dissolved in water is evenly distributed as in kool-aid.

43 Solutes, Solvents, Concentration
A solution is two substances combined Solute is what is being dissolved Solvent is what is doing the dissolving Solubility is the ability of the solvent to dissolve the solute. What is the universal solvent? water = solvent sugar = solute

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46 Chemical reactions

47 Only electrons are involved in chemical reactions.

48 The transfer of electrons results in ionic bonds.

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50 Covalent bonding involves the sharing of valence electrons

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52 A chemical change is a process in which reactants are changed into one or more different products. During this reaction, there is a rearrangement of atoms that makes or breaks chemical bonds. This change is usually not reversible, unlike physical changes, which typically are reversible. In short, chemical change is a change of one substance into another substance (i.e. a new substance is formed). By contrast, no new substance is formed in a physical change (for example, the melting of ice is a physical change because when ice changes into water, no new substance is formed.)

53 The pH scale uses numbers (0-14) to indicate acids and bases


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