Atom - the smallest unit of an element that has the properties of that element From the Greek word for indivisible

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Transcription:

Matter

Atom - the smallest unit of an element that has the properties of that element From the Greek word for indivisible

3 subatomic particles Proton - positively charged particle in the nucleus of an atom Neutron - neutral (un-charged) particle in the nucleus of an atom Electron - negatively charged particle that orbits the nucleus of an atom

The number of protons determines what element the atom is Atoms are electrically neutral (have the same number of protons and electrons)

Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons; these atoms are called isotopes

Periodic Table - a chart of the elements showing the repeating pattern of their properties

Using the periodic table: Atomic Number (number of protons) Symbol Name Atomic Mass (average mass of isotopes)

Fill in the blanks.

2 nd Quarter Extra Credit Opportunity Memorize the first 20 elements on the periodic table (20 points; 1 point each) Atomic Number Name Symbol Due January 10th

Atomic Snowflake Directions Fold your paper where indicated and cut out all of the grey sections. Knowing the number of electrons and that the atom has an atomic mass of 13, identify the element and figure out how many protons, neutrons, and electrons it has. Write that information on the back of your paper atom. Then, color the electrons and the correct number of protons and neutrons on the front of the atom.

Name that Element and Periodic Table Practice

Matter - anything that has mass and takes up space Chemistry - the study of the properties of matter and how matter changes

Pure substance - a single kind of matter that has a specific makeup and a specific set of properties examples: elements, table salt, water, baking soda

Element - a pure substance which cannot be broken down into any other substances by chemical or physical means

Physical Property - a characteristic of a pure substance which can be observed without changing it into another substance examples: hardness, texture, color, boiling point, melting point, freezing point, etc.

Chemical Property - a characteristic of a pure substance that describes its ability to change into different substances examples: flammability, ability to rust/tarnish, ability to react with acids, etc.

Molecule - two or more atoms chemically bonded together water, carbon dioxide, methane, etc

Compound - a pure substance made of two or more different elements chemically combined in a set ratio All compounds are molecules but not all molecules are compounds.

Compounds have properties that are different from those of the uncombined elements.

Mixture - two or more substances that are mixed together, but are not chemically combined the substances can often be separated from each other by physical means such as filtering, using magnets, boiling, etc. each substance keeps its individual properties and the substances are not combined in a set ratio (ex: soil, salt water)

Heterogeneous Mixtures - the different substances found in the mixture can easily be seen examples: soil, a salad, a chocolate chip cookie, etc.

Homogeneous Mixtures - the different substances found in the mixture cannot be seen examples: sugar cookies, kool-aid, etc

solution - a homogeneous mixture in which one substance is dissolved into another substance examples: Kool Aid, brass (a solid solution of copper and zinc), air (N 2 and O 2 with other gases)

Physical Change - a change in a substance that does not change its identity

change in size, shape, or phase (solid, liquid, gas) does not change what the substance is is often reversible examples: dissolving, crushing, cutting, melting, freezing, evaporating

Walking Through Paper

Ivory Soap The Soap That Floats

Chemical Change - a change in which one or more substances combine or break apart to form new substances

changes the chemical makeup of the substance often accompanied by release of a gas, color change, odor, release of heat usually not reversible examples: burning, rusting, baking, digestion, photosynthesis

Bromothymol Blue ph indicator CO 2 + H 2 O make carbonic acid

Carbon Snake exothermic reaction

Conservation of Mass - matter cannot be created or destroyed through chemical or physical changes In a chemical reaction, all atoms present at the start of a reaction are present at the end ex. Photosynthesis: 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2

Solid has a definite shape and a definite volume particles are packed tightly together in a fixed position; can vibrate slightly

crystalline solids have particles arranged in a regular, repeating pattern melt at a specific temperature examples: sugar, salt, snow, quartz

amorphous solids have particles which are not arranged in a regular pattern when heated, become softer and softer examples: wax, rubber, glass, plastic, butter

Liquid has a definite volume, but does not have a definite shape particles are packed tightly together, but are free to move around each other (fluid)

surface tension forms within liquids as the molecules of the liquid are attracted to each other surface acts like it has a thin skin

viscosity - a liquid s resistance to flowing honey has a higher viscosity than water

Gas does not have a definite shape or a definite volume; expands to fill its container fluid compressed = higher pressure

adding energy will cause a gas to expand taking energy away will cause it to contract

Phase Changes/Changes of State Melting - changing from a solid to a liquid thermal energy increases; particles break free from their fixed positions melting point is the same temperature as freezing point (water = 0 C or 32 F)

Freezing - changing from a liquid to a solid thermal energy decreases; particles slow down and begin to form the regular patterns of a solid

Sublimation - changing from a solid to a gas bypass the liquid stage examples: snow disappearing, dry ice

Vaporization - changing from a liquid to a gas on the surface = evaporation within a liquid = boiling

the lower the atmospheric pressure is, the lower the boiling point will be Water boils at 100 C in San Diego (sea level), but at 95 C in Denver (1,600 m elevation)

Condensation - changing from a gas to a liquid Particles lose energy, slow down, and condense into a liquid examples: cold drink on hot day, mirror after shower, dew on leaves

Thermal expansion - the tendency of matter to change in volume in response to a change in temperature

Water contracts as it is cooled until it reaches 4 C, then expands while it freezes (4 C - 0 C).

Super-cooled water video clips