Physics An Chemistry 3rd ESO - Unit3
Physics An Chemistry 3rd ESO - Unit3
Physics An Chemistry 3rd ESO - Unit3
Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. Chemistry is the
scientific study of matter, which means it is a very broad branch of knowledge.
In order to make sense of the tremendous amount of information that we can
learn about matter, chemists have developed categories of kinds of matter in which to
organize the information. If we examine a thing and decide which category it belongs
in, we are classifying it. Keep in mind that there are different systems of categories
which are not mutually exclusive. When we classify organisms in biology, for instance,
we can decide that a particular animal is male and that it is a reptile.
Two principal ways of classifying matter are:
- According to its physical state: gas, liquid, solid, plasma, etc.
- According to its composition: pure substances or mixtures.
PURE
SUBSTANCES
ELEMENTS
COMPOUNDS
MATTER
HETEROGENEOUS
MIXTURES
HOMOGENEOUS
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Most elements can interact with other elements to form compounds. Hydrogen
gas, for example, burns in oxygen gas to form water. Conversely, water can be
decomposed into its component elements by passing an electrical current through it.
The properties of water bear no resemblance to the properties of its component
elements. Hydrogen, oxygen and water are each unique substances.
Atoms can combine in many ways. Atoms of the same or different elements
can combine with one another to form bigger particles called molecules. A molecule is
a particle formed when two or more atoms join together chemically.
A compound is the substance formed by the chemical union of two or more
elements in a definite ratio, which is fixed by nature and cannot be altered. Some
compounds are formed of molecules. Water (H2O), for example, is a compound whose
molecules are composed of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. This ratio
is fixed by nature and it is unchangeable. When the compound is formed, a completely
new substance is made, the properties of which are quite different from its reacting
elements. Like elements, compounds also carry names and symbols that you will come
across in a later chapter.
Molecular hydrogen (H2), molecular oxygen (O2) and molecular nitrogen (N2)
are not compounds because each of their molecules is composed of atoms of a single
element. Water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are compounds
because each of their molecules is made from atoms of more than one element.
Compounds can be separated into elements using chemical methods but not
physical methods.
Iron is an element; it is shiny, strong, metallic, and magnetic. We cannot change
iron into anything simpler than iron. Oxygen is an element; it is a colourless, odourless
gas. When iron rusts, it combines with oxygen in the air to form the compound iron
oxide. Iron oxide not only has a different name, it has different properties from those of
iron and/or oxygen. It is reddish brown, a non-magnetic solid, crumbly rather than
strong. We can change rust into iron and oxygen, both of which are simpler than rust.
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How can you tell the difference between an element and a compound? You
cant unless you have access to fairly sophisticated chemical equipment. The good
news is that there are only about a hundred elements to learn. The bad news is that
there is an almost infinite number of compounds.
Each element contains a unique kind of particle called atom. Elements might consist of individual atoms, as in (a), or
molecules, (groups of atoms bonded together) as in (b). Compounds contain two or more different atoms chemically joined
together, as in (c). A mixture contains the individual units of its components, shown in (d) as both atoms and molecules.
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We see mixtures all the time in our everyday lives. Sea water, for example, is a
mixture of water, salt and other substances. Air is a mixture of gases such as nitrogen,
oxygen and other gases, and gasoline is a mixture of hydrocarbons. Some other
examples of mixtures include blood (a mixture of blood cells, platelets and plasma),
steel (a mixture of iron and other materials), the gold used in jewellery (the gold in
jewellery is not pure gold but is a mixture of metals13), milk (it is composed of water,
lactose, fats, proteins) and fruit drinks (for instance, orange juice is comprised of
citric acid, sugar, and water).
13
14
The amount of gold in the jewellery is measured in karats (24 karat would be pure gold, while 18 karat is only 75% gold).
To take this further, we first need to define "uniformity" in a more precise way, and this takes us to the concept of phases. A phase is a
region of matter that possesses uniform intensive properties throughout its volume. A volume of water, a chunk of ice, a grain of sand, a piece of
copper each of these constitutes a single phase, and by the above definition, is said to be homogeneous. A sample of matter can contain
more than a single phase; a cool drink with ice floating in it consists of at least two phases, the liquid and the solid ice. If it is a carbonated
beverage, you can probably see gas bubbles in it that make up a third phase.
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Most people think of liquids when they think about solutions, but you can also
have solutions of gases or solids. Earths atmosphere, for example, is a solution.
Because air is almost 79 per cent nitrogen, its considered the solvent, and the oxygen,
carbon dioxide, and other gases are considered the solutes.
In most common instances water is the solvent. The gases, liquids, or solids
dissolved in water are the solutes. For example, if you stir sugar into water, the sugar
dissolves in the water and seems to disappear. What happens to the sugar when it
dissolves? When a substance dissolves, it separates into the smallest particles that
make up the substance. These particles may be atoms or molecules.
Water is not the only liquid that can be a solvent. For example, gasoline is a
homogeneous mixture of liquids that contains no water. Other states of matter can also
form solutions. Gases can dissolve in liquids, and solids can dissolve in solids. For
example, many carbonated drinks are solutions of a gas (CO2), a liquid (H2O) and a
solid (sugar).
15
Water mixes with isopropanol to form a solution called rubbing alcohol. Water and isopropanol are miscible so they stay mixed. You can use
rubbing alcohol to disinfect cuts and scrapes.
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Examples
Solvent
liquid
liquid
solid
liquid
gas
liquid
gas
gas
gas
solid
H2 platinum (Pt)
liquid
gas
H2O in air
solid
gas
smog
liquid
solid
amalgam
solid
solid
alloy
air
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A common method of classifying colloids is based on the phase of the dispersed substance and what phase it is dispersed in. The types of
colloids include sol (solid in liquid), emulsion (liquid in liquid), foam (gas in liquid/solid), and aerosol (liquid/solid in gas).
17
Mayonnaise is made of tiny droplets of oil suspended in vinegar. Unlike the oil and vinegar of salad dressing, the oil and vinegar in mayonnaise
stay mixed because of egg yolks. Egg yolks act as an emulsifier. An emulsifier coats one type of particles in the mixture so that they cannot join,
forming a separate layer. Many food additives (E- number combinations) are emulsifying agents.
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b) PRESSURE: Gases become more soluble as the pressure above the
solution increases. Opening a bottle of soda decreases the pressure inside
the bottle. This decreases the solubility of CO2 in the soda and results in the
formation of bubbles, or fizz.
c) NATURE OF SOLUTE AND SOLVENT: the chemical properties of both,
solute and solvent affect the amount of solute dissolved.
d) AGITATION: Solutes dissolve faster when the solution is agitated by stirring
or shaking. The solvent immediately surrounding the solute can quickly
become saturated. Agitation helps bring fresh solvent into contact with the
surface of the solute so that more solute can dissolve. When adding sugar
to coffee, stirring helps the sugar dissolve faster.
e) SURFACE AREA: Solutes dissolve faster when the surface area of the
solute is increased by crushing it into smaller pieces. The greater the
surface area, the more opportunities there are for the solvent to attack the
solute. A sugar cube takes longer to dissolve in a cup of tea than an equal
amount of granulated sugar.
Dilute: You can say that a solution is dilute when there is very little
solute per given amount of solvent. If you dissolve 0,01 grams of sodium
chloride in a litre of water, for example, the solution is dilute.
Concentrated: A concentrated solution contains a large (but nonspecific) amount of solute dissolved in a solvent. If you dissolve 200
grams of sodium chloride in a litre of water, for example, the solution is
concentrated.
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Examples:
If, for example, you dissolve 5,0 grams of sodium chloride in 45 grams of water, the
mass percentage is
Therefore, the solution is a 10 percent (by mass) solution.
Mass percentage is the easiest percentage solution to make. Suppose that you want to
make 350,0 grams of a 5 percent sucrose (table sugar) solution.
You know that 5 percent of the mass of the solution is sugar, so you can multiply the
350,0 grams by 0,05 to get the mass of the sugar: 350,0 grams 0,05 = 17,5 grams of
sugar.
The rest of the solution (350,0 grams 17,5 grams = 332,5grams) is water. You can
simply measure 17,5 grams of sugar and add it to 332,5 grams of water to get your 5
percent (by mass) solution.
Ethyl alcohol (the alcohol we can drink) solutions are commonly made
using volume/volume percentages. For example, wine is about 12% V/V
ethanol. This means there are 12 mL ethanol for every 100 mL of wine. It is
important to realize liquid and gas volumes are not necessarily additive. If
you mix 12 mL of ethanol and 100 mL of grape juice, you will get less than
112 ml of solution.
This quantity represents the mass of solute divided by the volume of solution.
Usually the mass of solute is expressed in grams and the volume of the solution in
litres. In that case it shows how many grams of a certain substance are present in
one litre of a liquid or gaseous mixture. This measure of concentration is most often
used when discussing the solubility of a solid in a solution.
( )
( )
Milligrams per litre are often used in medicine and in medical prescriptions.
For example, a description of a solution that involves two substances, where one of the
substances involves adding water, would state: 10 mg/L water and substance. Blood
sugar concentration is sometimes measured in milligrams per decilitre (mg/dL).
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Percentages are convenient units for the solutions that chemists routinely make
in the lab or the solutions commonly found in nature. However, if you begin to examine
the concentrations of certain pollutants in the environment, you find that those
concentrations are very, very small. To express the concentrations of very dilute
solutions, scientists have developed another concentration unit called parts per
million, ppm, instead of percentage (parts per hundred). To find a concentration in
parts per million, divide the mass of solute by the mass of solution (both expressed in
the same units) and multiply the result by one million, 106:
By law, the maximum contamination level of lead in drinking water is 0,05 ppm.
This number corresponds to 0,05 milligrams of lead per litre of water. Thats very dilute.
But mercury is regulated at the 0,002 ppm level. Sometimes, even this unit isnt
sensitive enough, so environmentalists have resorted to the parts per billion (ppb) or
parts per trillion (ppt) concentration units. For example, some neurotoxins are deadly at
the parts per billion level only. To find a concentration in parts per billion, divide the
mass of the solute by the mass of the solution and multiply by one billion.
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SEDIMENTS
REFRIGERATION
VACUUM
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1. White gold, used in jewellery, contains two elements, gold and palladium. Two
different samples of white gold differ in the relative amounts of gold and palladium
that they contain. Both are uniform in composition throughout. Without knowing any
more about the materials, how would you classify white gold?
2. Aspirin is composed of 60,0% carbon, 4,5% hydrogen, and 35,5% oxygen by mass,
regardless of its source. Is aspirin a mixture or a compound?
3.
NAME
PICTURE
TYPE OF
MATTER
FORMULA/
SYMBOL
Liquid
Mercury
Pure
substance
Element
Granite
Sulphur
Salt
(Sodium Chloride)
Sea water
4.
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5.
6.
7.
8.
In the boxes below different atoms are represented by and .Match the letter on
the box to the following descriptions:
a. A mixture of gases.
b. A gaseous compound.
c. Oxygen.
d. A solid.
e. A gaseous compound made up of single atoms.
9. The following table shows some substances, their formulae and diagrams that can
be used to represent them.
a. Use the information in the table to work out
the key being used to represent the
different elements in the diagrams.
represents the element . . .. . . . .
represents the element . .. . . . . . .
represents the element . . . . . . . .
represents the element . . . . . . .
b. Choose from the box below the term used
to describe all the substances in the table
above
Element
Compound
Mixture
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10. The diagrams below show the arrangement of atoms in a pure metal and in some
alloys. Use the key to identify individual atoms.
Draw a line between each arrangement of atoms and the correct description for
that substance. One has been done for you.
11. The graph below shows the solubility of potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7) in water at
different temperatures
The table below shows the solubility of potassium chloride (KCl) in water at
different temperatures.
Temperature (C)
20 40
60
80
28
34 40
46
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12. The graph shows the solubility of various substances plotted against the
temperature of the solution.
a. Which substance decreases in
solubility
as
the
temperature
increases?
b. Which substance is least soluble at
room
temperature?
Which
substance is most soluble at room
temperature?
c. The solubility of which substance is
least affected by a change in
temperature?
d. At what temperature is the solubility
of potassium chlorate (KClO3) equal
to 40 g/100 g of water?
e. Which substance changes most in solubility with increase in temperature?
13. What is the percent composition of a solution in which 80 grams of sodium
hydroxide, NaOH, is dissolved in 1 litre of water?
14. A solution of sugar contains 35 grams of sucrose, C12H22O11 in 100 mL of water.
What is the percent composition of the solution?
15. What is the percent composition of a solution in which 480 grams of sodium
chloride, NaCl, are dissolved in 4 litres of water.
16. What is the mass percent of glucose in a solution made by dissolving 4,6 g of
glucose in 145,2 g of water?
17. How would you prepare 400 g of a 2,50% solution of sodium chloride?
18. How much alcohol is there in 250 mL of beer (6)?
19. What is the concentration of a solution in grams/Litre when 80 grams of sodium
chloride, NaCl, is dissolved in 2 L of solution?
20. A solution of sodium hydroxide, NaOH, contains 12 grams of solute in 4 litres of
solution. What is the concentration of the solution in grams/Litre?
21. A solution of sugar contains 35 grams of sucrose, C12H22O11 in 100 mL of solution.
What is the concentration of the solution in grams/Litre?
22. You add 11 mg of sulfuric acid to 2,000 grams of water. What is the resulting
concentration of sulfuric acid, in ppm?
23. A solution has a concentration of 1,25g/kg. What is its concentration in ppm?
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24. Choose from the list the most suitable method for each of the following
separations:
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30. James and Lucy were investigating colours in ink. They were given three pure
substances, A, B and C, and two mixtures X and Y. They carried out a paper
chromatography experiment. The chromatogram produced is shown in the
diagram below.
a. Which substances were found in
mixture X? (ii) What did the
experiment tell them about mixture
Y?
b. The Rf (retardation factor) value of a
substance can be used to identify
that substance. The Rf value is given
by the formula:
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Some of the information used to write this chapter has been extracted from the
following websites and books. You can take a look at them in order to review and
enhance your knowledge of this matter
-
http://www.edu.xunta.es/espazoAbalar/sites/espazoAbalar/files/datos/1330345140/c
ontido/typesofmatter.html
http://www.docbrown.info/ks3chemistry/8E8FmcHP6.htm
http://www.docbrown.info/ks3chemistry/7HmcHP6.htm
http://www.docbrown.info/page01/ElCpdMix/EleCmdMix2.htm
http://www.chemprofessor.com/matter.htm
http://www.chem1.com/acad/webtext/pre/chemsci.html
http://everythingscience.co.za/grade-10/02-classification-of-matter/
http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/165/169061/blb9ch0102.html
http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/3310/3390101/blb0102.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks3/science
http://www.ausetute.com.au/
http://cnx.org/content/m39993/latest/
http://www.lcmrschooldistrict.com/demers/cbphysicalscience/
http://chemwiki.ucdavis.edu/Physical_Chemistry/
http://www.gcsescience.com/index.html
http://www.sciencegeek.net/Chemistry/
http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/solutions/character.html
http://sfscience.wordpress.com/2010/04/13/separating-mixtures/
http://www.edinformatics.com/math_science/suspensions_colloids.htm
http://www.aqa.org.uk/
http://www.edexcel.com/i-am-a/student/Pages/pastpapers.aspx
http://www.wjec.co.uk/index.php?nav=106
http://freeexampapers.com/#/IB
Chemistry for You by Lawrie Ryan. Published by Nelson Thornes. Cheltenham, U.K.
2001.
IMAGES:
http://search.creativecommons.org/
http://images.google.com/
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