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Jeopardy Properties Of Matter States of Matter/ Physical & Chem- ical Changes Mixtures and Solutions Separating Mixtures Wild Card Q $100 Q $200 Q $300.

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Presentation on theme: "Jeopardy Properties Of Matter States of Matter/ Physical & Chem- ical Changes Mixtures and Solutions Separating Mixtures Wild Card Q $100 Q $200 Q $300."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Jeopardy Properties Of Matter States of Matter/ Physical & Chem- ical Changes Mixtures and Solutions Separating Mixtures Wild Card Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy Matter

3 $100 Question – Properties of Matter Matter is anything that has ____________ and takes up ______________.

4 $100 Answer - Properties of Matter Matter is anything that has mass and volume.

5 $200 Question - Properties of Matter The particles of matter are microscopic. What does this mean?

6 $200 Answer - Properties of Matter Microscopic means that the particles are too small to be seen with the eye. A microscope must be used to analyze them.

7 $300 Question - Properties of Matter

8 $300 Answer - Properties of Matter B – a physical property

9 $400 Question - Properties of Matter

10 $400 Answer - Properties of Matter A – graduated cylinder

11 $500 Question – Properties of Matter

12 $500 Answer - Properties of Matter G – heat.

13 $100 Question – States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes AB C The models above show how the particles look in the three main states of matter. Identify the state of matter represented by each model.

14 $100 Answer – States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes A = solid B = liquid C = gas

15 $200 Question - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes A B C Name the three main states of matter that match the descriptions.

16 $200 Answer - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes A = liquid B = gas C = solid

17 $300 Question - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes What type of change has this matter gone through?

18 $300 Answer - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes A physical change. When matter changes from one state to another (such as from a liquid to a gas, a solid to a gas, a solid to a liquid, a gas to a liquid, etc.) it has only changed physically. If a new substance is formed, or if light/heat are generated, this usually indicates a chemical change (ex: when rust is formed, when an object is burned, etc.)

19 $400 Question - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes

20 $400 Answer - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes A – melting butter. This is a physical change because the butter has only changed states, from a solid to a liquid. No new substances were formed.

21 $500 Question - States of Matter / Physical and Chemical Changes

22 $500 Answer - 3 Main Types of Matter B – heat it. By baking the cake batter, it will cause the substances to change in such a way that a new substance is formed. Once as chemical change like this happens, it cannot be reversed.

23 $100 Question – Mixtures and Solutions

24 $100 Answer - Mixtures and Solutions D – two or more different substances.

25 $200 Question - Mixtures and Solutions What does the caption mean when it states, “In a mixture, each substance keeps its own properties?”

26 $200 Answer - Mixtures and Solutions It means that the physical properties of the substances have not changed. For example, in the trail mix mixture, the substances have not changed their shape, size, color, taste, etc. Since the substances have kept their original properties, the mixture can be separated back into its original, separate substances.

27 $300 Question - Mixtures and Solutions Additional Questions: A solution has two parts: a solute and a solvent. In a sugar water solution, which is the solute and which is the solvent.

28 $300 Answer - Mixtures and Solutions C – the sugar dissolves in the water, and you cannot see it. The sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.

29 $400 Question - Mixtures and Solutions

30 $400 Answer - Mixtures and Solutions A – add more salt. The more solute a solution has, the more concentrated it is. Adding more solvent would lower the concentration of the solution.

31 $500 Question - Mixtures and Solutions

32 $500 Answer - Mixtures and Solutions B – cold tea has a lower rate of dissolving than hot tea. In general, the hotter the liquid (solvent), the faster it can dissolve a solid (solute).

33 $100 Question – Separating Mixtures

34 $100 Answer - Separating Mixtures D – sand and rocks. A strainer would work well because the sand and rocks are different sizes. The sand would pass through the holes in the strainer while the rocks stayed on top.

35 $200 Question - Separating Mixtures

36 $200 Answer - Separating Mixtures A – floatation. Once the oil floats to the surface of the water, it can then be skimmed off the top using a filter which captures the oil while allowing the water to pass through.

37 $300 Question - Separating Mixtures When is it a good time to use magnetism to separate a mixture? Give an example.

38 $300 Answer - Separating Mixtures When the mixture contains some substances that are magnetic and some that are not. An example would be a bucket of nails and screws that are mixed with wood, plastic pieces, dirt, etc. A magnet could quickly get the nails and screws separated from the other materials.

39 $400 Question - Separating Mixtures When would be a good time to use filtration to separate a mixture? Give an example.

40 $400 Answer - Separating Mixtures A good time to use the process of filtration to separate a mixture would be when the mixture contains solids that have different particle sizes. For example, a mixture of flour, salt, and water could be passed through filter paper to remove the flour. The salt and water would pass through the filter and captured in a cup, where it could be separated through evaporation.

41 $500 Question - Separating Mixtures

42 $500 Answer - Separating Mixtures D – separate solutes in a solution.

43 $100 Question – Wild Card

44 $100 Answer – Wild card A – harmful gases are released into the air.

45 $200 Question – Wild card What type of change have the objects in the pictures above gone through? How can you tell?

46 $200 Answer – Wild card Chemical change. You can tell because in each instance, a new substance was formed (ashes, rust, etc.)

47 $300 Question – Wild card

48 $300 Answer – Wild Card A – decreasing the temperature. This would have the opposite affect of slowing down (decreasing) the rate of dissolving.

49 $400 Question – Wild card

50 $400 Answer – Wild Card C – biodegradable materials. Biodegradable means that the materials are able to break down safely into the earth.

51 $500 Question – Wild card

52 $500 Answer – Wild card H – sometimes. Some mixtures are solutions, but not all. A mixture is only a solution if one substance dissolves in the other (a solute and a solvent).

53 Final Jeopardy A teacher mixed a solid with a liquid. A cloud of white gas formed. What most likely happened? What evidence do you have to help you draw this conclusion?

54 Final Jeopardy Answer A chemical change has occurred. You can tell because a new substance (a white cloud of gas) was formed. The original mixture did not contain a gas, only a solid and a liquid.


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