Chapter 4: Elements, Compounds, & Mixtures
Name:______
Elements. The Simplest Substance
Element –
Ex.
A substance that contains only one type of particle is a ______.
Characteristic Properties –
Each element has its own characteristic property. Elements can share properties, but still have their own
Identifying Elements by:
1.
Ex.
2.
Ex.
Classifying Elements
Elements are arranged on the ______
according to their properties.
The 3 sections are:
1.
2.
3.
Metal-
Properties
- Malleable –
- Ductile –
Nonmetal –
Properties
1.
2.
Metalloid-
Properties
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Appearance / Conductivity / Physically / ExampleMetal
Nonmetal
Metalloid
Compounds
Compound-
Molecule-
A compound is different from the ______that reacted to form it.
How are compounds formed?
Compounds form in a ______
Ex. Water – H2O The mass of H to O is 1:8. (2g H and 16 g O)
Every water molecule will have the same ratio.
Familiar Compounds
Compound / Elements CombinedTable Salt / Sodium and chlorine
Water / Hydrogen and oxygen
Vinegar / Hydrogen, carbon, oxygen
Carbon dioxide / Carbon and oxygen
Baking soda / Sodium, hydrogen, carbon, oxygen
Properties of Compounds
Every compound has its own ______.
Ex.
Properties of Compounds vs. Elements
A compound has properties that ______from the properties of the elements that form it.
Ex.Table salt – sodium chloride
Chlorine – poisonous yellow gas
Sodium – soft metal that reacts violently with water
Breaking Down Compounds
Some compounds can be broken down into their elements through a
______
Other compounds can be broken down to form ______
______instead of elements. These simple compounds can than be broken down into their elements.
Ex. Carbonic acid is put into soda so it “fizzes”.
•Carbonic acid in soda carbon dioxide and water
•Carbon dioxide C, O, H chemically
Compounds in Your World – Industry and Nature
Industry
- Compounds found in nature are not the materials needed in industry. They must be broken down or combined
- Aluminum is not found alone in nature. It is produced by breaking down the compound aluminum oxide.
Nature
- Some compounds play an important role in living things – carbon dioxide for plants, nitrogen gas for proteins
Mixtures
What do you get if you roll out dough, add tomato sauce, sprinkle cheese on top, and add pepperoni, peppers, and mushrooms?
Mixture –
No ______occurs when a mixture is made. Each substance in a mixture keeps its own ______
Ex. Cheese, sauce, mushrooms, etc.
There is ______in a mixture.
What happens if you don’t like peppers on your pizza?
Other ways of separating mixtures:
1.
Salt in water
2.
Crude oil separated into gasoline and kerosene
3.
Iron and aluminum nails in a box
4.
Parts of blood
Mixtures vs. Compounds
Mixtures / CompoundsMade of elements, compounds or both
Change in original properties of components
Separated by physical means
Formed using a set ratio of components
There are three types of mixtures; solutions, suspensions, colloids
Solutions
Solution-
Kool Aide is an example of a solution. The Kool Aide powder is the ______and the water is the ______
Solute-
Solvent-
If a solute dissolves in a solvent it is said to be ______
Solutions do not have to be liquids. They can also be ______
and ______.
Ex. A.
B.
Particles in a solution are so ______they never ______.
Therefore they can not be removed by ______.
Solubility
Have you ever added too much sugar to your lemonade and not all of it dissolved? Some of it sinks to the bottom.
To Find out exactly how much sugar you need to all so it all dissolves you need to know the ______of the sugar.
Solubility-
How can you make sugar dissolve in water faster?
1.
-
2.
-
3.
-
Suspensions
Have you ever eaten Italian dressing and shaken it up to use and once it sat again all of the “chunks” settled to the bottom?
Suspension-
The particles in a suspension are ______enough to ______
or ______light.
A suspension can be ______by passing it through a ______
In between the size of the particles in a solution and a suspension are a ______.
Colloid-
Particles in a colloid are large enough to ______
But too small to be ______.
Ex.
Review: Classification of Matter
Elements, Compounds, Mixtures Review
Elements / Compounds / MixturesHow many parts make it up?
Pure Substance or not?
Chemically or physically combined?
Chemical change to make them?
Fixed ratio?
How separated: chemically/
physically?
Solution / Suspension / Colloid
Particle size:
S, M, L
Filter?
Scatter light?
Settle out?
Two examples
04 Notes_S Reynolds & Scafidi