Chapter 4, Section 3 Crystal Chemistry Monday, December 14, 2009 Pages 128 -- 130.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life   Section 1 – Nature of Matter.
Advertisements

 7 th Grade.  Differentiate between minerals and rocks.  Describe the distinguishing properties that can be used to classify minerals. (texture, smell,
Properties of Minerals
Chapter 2 Section 1 Review: Properties of Minerals.
Minerals 6.E.2.3 Explain how the formation of soil is related to the parent rock type and the environment in which it develops.
Chapter 4, Section 1 Ionic Bonds Thursday, December 3, 2009 Pages
Essential Questions How are minerals defined? How do minerals form? How are minerals classified? Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education What is a mineral?
Minerals Properties of Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and definite chemical.
Chapter 4, Section 2 Covalent Bonds
Minerals Chapter /2010. Minerals Naturally occurring Inorganic solid Crystal structure Definite chemical composition.
Properties of Minerals
Mineral Properties and identification. Animal, Vegetable, or Mineral? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company What do minerals have in.
Minerals CH 2 Prentice Hall p CH 2 Prentice Hall p
Minerals Mrs. Christopherson Properties of Minerals What is a mineral? –Naturally occurring –Inorganic –Solid –Crystal structure –Definite chemical.
Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. In.
2.1 Notes Properties of Minerals
Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks.
Unit 3 Lesson 1 Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Chapter 2, Section 2 How Minerals Form Friday, October 23, 2009 Pages Friday, October 23, 2009 Pages
WHAT IS A MINERAL? - A NATURALLY OCCURRING SOLID THAT CAN FORM BY INORGANIC PROCESSES AND THAT HAS A CRYSTAL STRUCTURE AND A DEFINITE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION.
The chemistry of life The nature of matter Section 2.1.
Section 1: Properties of Minerals.  After completing the lesson, students will be able to...  Identify the characteristics of a mineral;  Identify.
Minerals. What is a Mineral??? Minerals are made up of elements In order to be a mineral there are 5 important characteristics….. 1. It occurs naturally.
Composition and Structure of Minerals After completing this section, students will discover the unique physical characteristics of various minerals (Standard.
Minerals.
What they are, how they form, and how we use ‘em.
Chapter 3 Matter and Minerals. Minerals Minerals in Rocks.
2.1 Guided Reading. C. Solid D. Crystal Structure E. Definite chemical composition B. Streak C. Luster E. Hardness F. Crystal systems G. Cleavage & fracture.
Chapter 3 Section 1.  A mineral is ◦ Naturally occurring ◦ Inorganic- it has no carbon in its chemical formula ◦ Has a definite chemical composition.
What is this? Are you sure this is a rock? What else could it be? What tests could you do to determine the type of rock you just picked up?
Chapter 15 Chemical Compounds.
7th Grade Science Minerals section 3-1.
 Naturally occuring  Solid  Formed by inorganic processes  Have a crystal structure  Definite chemical composition  To be a mineral – MUST HAVE.
GIG Open up your textbook to page 50, and read MY PLANET DIARY. Complete the question with a partner. 2.Put sticky note in notebook where homework.
Composition and Structure of Minerals.  It occurs naturally  It is a solid  It has a definite chemical composition  Its atoms are arranged in an orderly.
Minerals. Background Information Element: a substance made up of only one kind of atoms Example: Gold (Au), Aluminum (Al) Compound: a mixture of two or.
5.2 Composition and Structure of Minerals Objectives: 1)Identify the characteristics of minerals, 2)Explain how minerals form. 3)List the physical characteristics.
Properties of Minerals Chapter 2.1. What is a mineral? For something to be a mineral it must consist of the following: – It must be naturally occurring.
Minerals CHARACTERISTICS, IDENTIFYING, HOW DO MINERALS FORM?
Chapter Four Chemical Bonding. Lesson 4-1 Ionic Bonds.
Minerals. What is a mineral? A mineral occurs naturally, it’s inorganic, a solid that has crystal structure and definite chemical composition.
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS MRS SANDY GOMEZ. CHARACTERISTICS OF MINERALS  Naturally Occuring: Formed by natural processes in the world.
Properties of Minerals. Vocabulary Mineral: naturally occurring solid formed by inorganic process, has crystal structure, definite chemical composition.
Science 8—Chapter 13-Quiz
Minerals and Mineral Properties
Unit 3 Lesson 1 Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Chapter 4: Section1 What Are Minerals?
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS Chapter 2, Section 1
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
Minerals Chapter 3.
Structure of Minerals All minerals are crystalline
Minerals.
Minerals and rOCKS Chapter 2.
Chapter 2.1 What Are Minerals?
Mineral Properties.
Chapter 2 Minerals.
Unit 3 Lesson 1 Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Minerals All matter is made of elements A mineral: 1. occurs naturally
Chapter 3 Section 1: Properties of minerals
DEFINITION OF MINERAL Naturally occurring, Inorganic Solid with a
Earth Chemistry & Minerals
Chapter 2, Lesson 2, Minerals and Rocks
Unit 3 Lesson 1 Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Chapter 17 Section 1 Part A Composition of Matter.
Unit 3 Lesson 1 Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Minerals Mr. Q/Mrs. Wolfe.
Minerals.
CH 4 Earth Chemistry.
What is a mineral? What is a mineral?
Earth Science Chapter 4 Section 1
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 4, Section 3 Crystal Chemistry Monday, December 14, 2009 Pages

Objectives Explain how the chemical bonds of a crystal determine the substance’s properties. Describe and give examples of mineral crystals.

Vocabulary Word Mineral

Mineral Properties A mineral is a naturally occurring solid. It has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. A few are elements. Most are compounds.

Mineral Properties -- cont’d Properties include: Color Shininess Density Crystal shape Hardness Magnetism

Mineral Properties -- cont’d Minerals break into regular shapes. Splits easily easily along fat surfaces and at sharp angles. Crystals also grow in characteristic shapes. All properties depend on its chemical composition. Each mineral is different because each has a different chemical composition.

Bonding in Mineral Crystals The arrangement of particles in a mineral and the kind of bonds holding them together determine properties such as crystal shape, hardness, and the way the crystal breaks apart.

An Ionic Crystal Example is Halite. Made of sodium chloride. Soft. Easily dissolved. Even breaks

Covalent Crystal Example is Quartz. Covalent bonds are strong. Won’t dissolve in water. Hard No defined lines of weakness.

Homework Workbook 4.3 (due 12/16) No vocabulary quiz!!