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CHANGES.

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Presentation on theme: "CHANGES."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHANGES

2 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES Physical property- characteristics of a material that can be observed without changing the identity of the substances in the material. These include color, shape, size, density, melting point, and boiling point

3 Appearance- Physical description of a substance
Appearance- Physical description of a substance. (color, shape, size, density) Behavior- How a substance acts. (magnetism, viscosity, ductility) Observations- Start and end with the same substance

4 PHYSICAL CHANGE Physical change- Change in a substance’s size, shape, or state of matter. Substances do not change identity when it undergoes a physical change.

5 PHYSICAL CHANGES EXAMPLES
Biting Melting cutting

6 More Examples breaking a glass haircut adding chocolate squeezing
syrup to ice cream squeezing a wet sponge

7 CHEMICAL PROPERTIES Chemical property- characteristic of a substance indicating that it can change chemically. (flammability, light sensitivity)

8 Chemical Change Chemical Change- When one substance changes to another substance a chemical change has occurred. Some indicated by temperature change, color change, noticeable smell, gas production or formation of a precipitate Others occur slowly. – rust

9 CHEMICAL CHANGES EXAMPLES
SALIVA, STOMACH ACID, ENZYMES (chemicals which speed up reactions) Rust/Tarnishing FIRE-burning

10 EVIDENCE OF CHEMICAL CHANGES

11 WEATHERING Weathering- involves both chemical and physical changes.
Physical- ex: big rocks split into smaller ones, streams carry rocks from one place to another Chemical- ex: occur in rocks when calcium carbonate in limestone changes to calcium hydrogen carbonate due to acid rain

12 Energy in Reactions

13 Bonding and Energy Energy is required to break chemical bonds.
Energy is released when chemical bonds are formed.

14 Chemical reactions can also be categorized into two types
Endothermic Reactions Exothermic Reactions

15 Endothermic Reactions

16 Sucks in the heat Turns cold Absorbs energy - heat

17 Endothermic (in-heat)
Reactions absorb heat by absorbing energy Sometimes called endergonic

18 Endothermic Temperature of the products may be less than temperature of reactants This type of reaction produces a decrease in temperature

19 Endothermic Examples : Baking soda and vinegar Instant cold packs

20

21 Exothermic Reactions

22 Releases energy - heat

23 Exothermic (out-heat)
Reactions that produce heat by releasing energy Sometimes called exergonic

24 Exothermic Temperature of products is usually greater than temperature of reactants This type of reaction produces an increase in temperature

25 Exothermic Examples : Hot hands Bunsen Burner-lit Candle
Combustion in car engine

26

27 Why isn’t freezing water an endothermic reaction?


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