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A combination of two or more substances NOT chemically combined

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Presentation on theme: "A combination of two or more substances NOT chemically combined"— Presentation transcript:

1 A combination of two or more substances NOT chemically combined
Mixtures A combination of two or more substances NOT chemically combined

2 Types of Mixtures Solutions Suspensions Colloids

3 Mixtures … Each substance keeps its own identity
Components do not have a definite ratio Can be separated using physical means

4 More characteristics Mixtures can be made up of elements, compounds or both A mixture could be a pizza, a rock, air, lemonade, colloids a solution…..

5 2 Kinds of Mixtures Heterogenous mixtures
is not uniform in composition(not same type of particle throughout). If you were to sample one portion of such a mixture, it’s composition would be different from that of another portion. e.g. Salad dressing

6 2nd types of mixture Homogenous mixtures
Is the type of mixture that is uniform in composition (same type of particle through-out). If you were to sample one portion of such a mixture, it’s composition would be similar to that of another portion.e.g. juice

7 New Terms Concentrated Dilute Soluble Insoluble Saturated, unsaturated

8 1. Solutions Appears like one substance, but made up of 2 or more substances; Homogenous Ex. Salt water: Water: solvent Sodium chloride: solute

9 Vocabulary Concentrated: Has more solute Dilute: Has less solute.
Saturated solution: Contains all the solute it can take at given temp.

10 -Substance in which solute dissolves
E.g. Salt water: Solvent: Is water -Substance in which solute dissolves Usually the larger quantity Water=Universal Solvent

11 Solute: Is Sodium Chloride
-Substance that dissolves in solvent - Usually the lesser quantity

12 Unsaturated: Solvent can dissolve more solute
Soluble: Can dissolve Insoluble: Cannot dissolve

13 Types of Solutions Gas in gas: air Gas in liquid: pool chlorine
Liquid in gas: water vapor Liquid in liquid: antifreeze Solid in solid: alloys-steel Solid in liquid: salt water Solid in gas: smoke

14 Characteristics of Solutions
Particles VERY small (ions) Cannot be filtered(pass thru’) Light passing through does not scatter (transparent) Solubility determines how much solute in a solvent

15 Concentration How much solute per unit of solvent
35 g. NaCl in 175 mL water -concentration = 35/175 g/mL = 0.2g/mL

16 Solubility of a solute Amount of solute needed to make a saturated solution in a given solvent at a given temperature.

17 Solubility Rules How MUCH solute can be dissolved?
Depends on temperature: solubility of solids in liquids increases as temperature increases Is opposite for gases! e.g. soda…

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20 Prediction: Which of these is a solution?
Air? Soft Drinks? Ocean water? Antifreeze? Brass? Rocks? Popcorn and Salt in a bag?

21 Q: What did the compound say to the solution?
Check this out…  Q: What did the compound say to the solution? A: You’re all MIXED UP!

22 2. Suspensions a mixture where the particles are large enough to settle out. Separated by filtering Examples: salad dressing, blood

23 3. Colloids Halfway between a solution and a suspension
Particles can’t be filtered Particles can scatter light – The Tyndale Effect Examples: mayo, milk, gelatin, whipped cream

24 The Tyndale Effect Light passes straight through a solution(left) but is scattered by a colloid (right)

25 Characteristics Heterogeneous Each part of the mixture retains its own identity Parts of a mixture do not have a definite ratio Mixtures CAN be separated using physical methods

26 Ways to Separate Mixtures (physical methods):
Distillation/Condensation Using a magnet Centrifuging Filtering Evaporation

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28 Chemical Methods of breaking down Compounds
Heat Electrolysis – pass an electric current through. E.g. electrolysis of water to H2 and O2 gases, salt to Na & Cl2 gas Chemical reactions – Carbonic acid(H2CO3) breaks down to CO2 an H2O, which can break down even further to C, O and H Cannot be broken with physical methods

29 Distillation in the Lab

30 Decantation Filtration Evaporation

31 I Understand … Comparing Mixtures and Compounds Compounds Mixtures
Components are elements Components are elements, compounds or both Components lose their original properties Components keep their original properties Separated by chemical means Separated by physical means Formed using a set(fixed) mass ratio of components Formed using any mass ratio of components

32 Separation of a mixture Assignment
How can we separate a mixture of Sand, Salt and Fe filings? What physical properties are being used? Design and Write a possible plan to Test it.


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