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Section 1: Describing Matter What kinds of properties are used to describe matter? What are elements, and how do they relate to compounds? What are the.

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Presentation on theme: "Section 1: Describing Matter What kinds of properties are used to describe matter? What are elements, and how do they relate to compounds? What are the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Section 1: Describing Matter What kinds of properties are used to describe matter? What are elements, and how do they relate to compounds? What are the properties of a mixture?

2 Compare the particles in each example: Aluminum FoilTable SaltWood

3 The most basic type of matter/can’t be broken down further

4 1. Elements The building blocks of all matter in the universe Cannot be broken down into any other substances Elements

5 1. Elements (continued) There are about 100 different types of elements (listed in periodic table) Examples: O = N = H = C = Cu = Al = Oxygen Nitrogen Helium Carbon Copper Aluminum

6 1. Elements (continued) Each type of element has its own properties Cl = ChlorineCu = CopperBr = Bromine

7 1. Elements (continued) Atoms = basic particles from which all elements are made Different atom = different element Aluminum- Chlorine Sodium- Oxygen

8 So, if there are only about 100 or so elements (building blocks) how come there are so many different examples of matter (stuff)?

9 2. Compounds When 2 or more elements combine chemically (bonded together) += Element Compound Sodium Chlorine Sodium Chloride (salt)

10 2. Compounds (continued) Atoms of the different elements are in a fixed ratio Written as chemical formulas (letters and numbers) Examples: Water = H 2 O Carbon dioxide = CO 2 Glucose = C 6 H 12 O 6

11 2. Compounds (continued) When ratios change, a different compound results – CO = carbon monoxide – CO 2 = carbon dioxide

12 2. Compounds (continued) Compounds have different properties than the individual elements that make them up + = Element Compound Silver (Ag) Chlorine (Cl) Silver Chloride (AgCl) Shiny, gray metalYellow/green gasSolid white crystals

13 Most of the stuff around us is NOT or but… Elements Compounds Mixtures

14 3. Mixtures Contain of 2 or more elements, compounds, or both in the same place The components are NOT combined chemically

15 3. Mixtures (continued) Easy to separate (magnets, filtering, evaporating) Example: saltwater (salt in water, but salt stays salt, water remains water)

16 3. Mixtures (continued) Each substance keeps its own properties (salt = white grains, water = clear liquid) Do not have to be in a fixed ratio (lots of salt or a little salt, its still saltwater)

17 3. Mixtures (continued) There are 2 Types of Mixtures: 1. Heterogeneous Mixtures - Different parts are visible - Examples: Salad Soil Pencil

18 3. Mixtures (continued) 2. Homogeneous Mixtures - Evenly mixed, looks the same throughout - Examples: Saltwater Air Brass

19 Practice Questions 1.How are elements and compounds similar? How are they different? 1.Plants make a sugar compound with the formula C6H12O6. What elements make up this compound? 1.Look at the following chemical formulas: H 2 O 2 and H 2 O. Do these formulas represent the same compound? Explain. 4. How does a heterogeneous mixture differ from a homogenous mixture? 5.Why is it correct to say that saltwater is a mixture? 6.Suppose you stir baking soda into water until the water looks clear throughout. How could you prove to someone that the clear material is a solution, not a compound?


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