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Classification of Matter

Concept One: Homogeneous Substances


A homogeneous substances looks to a persons eyes as if it is
uniform throughout, appearing to be of one substance.
Concept Two: Heterogeneous Substances

A heterogeneous substances looks to a persons eyes


as if it is made up of two or more parts.
Concept Three: A Pure Substance
A pure substance has properties that are fixed and exact which
do NOT change over time or from sample to sample of the
same substance.

Sodium is soft, silvery in color, melts at


97.8 celsius, conducts electricity well and
explodes when placed in water.
Concept Four: Impure Substances
An impure substance has variable (changing) properties from
sample to sample of the substance. The properties of an
impure substance are NOT FIXED (melting point/boiling point
varies, density varies, color varies etc.)

The color of a tea solution can vary as can its strength. Even though a
substance LOOKS uniform throughout (homogeneous), it is NOT
NECESSARILY PURE!
Heating and Cooling Curves of Pure and Impure Substances
The heating/cooling curve of a pure substance always has
plateaus or flat sections where it melts or boils because it
melts/boils at fixed temperatures whereas impure substances
melt/boil at variable temperatures.
Every Pure Substance has Unique, Fixed Melting
and Boiling Points
Pure substances are distinguished by their physical and
chemical properties

Physical properties are properties


that substances have by Chemical properties are properties
themselves (Like color, density, that substances have when they
electrical conductivity, melting are combined with other
point, boiling point) substances (Like fizzing with an
acid, solubility with water etc.)
Physical and Chemical Changes

A chemical change (reaction) is a


change in which new substances are
A physical change is a change in which formed with different physical and
a substance retains its identity chemical properties from the original
(becomes itself in another form) and substance(s).
usually can be easily reversed.
A Classification System For Matter
Mixtures
Mixtures are impure substances with variable properties.
The four common types of mixtures are mechanical mixtures,
suspensions, colloids and solutions.
Mechanical mixtures are impure, heterogeneous
substances made up of different parts visible to the
unaided eye.
The Tyndall Effect
When light passing through a substance is visible from the side
(due to particles big enough to scatter the light), this is called
the Tyndall Effect.
The Tyndall Effect is used to classify mixtures
The Tyndall Effect is only observed when the
particles in suspension are large enough to scatter
light sideways
Filtration
Filtration removes large suspended particles.
Being able to remove parts of a mixture by filtration is a way to
distinguish different kinds of mixtures.
Distillation
A Liquid mixture can be heated and the different liquids in the
mixture will boil off as vapours at different temperatures, leaving
dissolved solids as a residue when all the liquids have been
vaporized.
Commercial Distillation
Distillation is a
technique used to
separate components
of mixtures in many
commercial operations
like making brandies
or whiskeys or, in
separating crude oil
into its parts.
Chromatography
Components of mixtures can be separated by chromatography
in which a sample is placed in a solvent which dissolves and
moves mixture parts at different rates, separating them.
Ink Chromatography
Solutions are impure homogeneous mixtures that
are usually clear (may be colored).

Solutions do NOT show the Tyndall


Effect because their particles are too
small.
Solutions may be separated with
distillation and with chromatography.
Solutions can NOT be separated by
filtration.
Alloys are solutions of two or more metals
Brass is an alloy of zinc and copper.
Bronze is an alloy of tin and copper.
Stainless steel is an alloy of iron, carbon, chromium or nickel.
Colloids Cant be Separated by Filtration
Colloids are impure and homogeneous. They can be clear,
cloudy or opaque mixtures that have large enough particles to
show the Tyndall Effect.
Suspensions
Suspensions are impure heterogeneous/homogeneous
mixtures whose parts can be separated by filtration.
On standing, parts of suspensions often settle to the bottom
because their particles are large enough to be pulled down by
gravity.
Centrifuges and Suspensions

Centrifuges spinning at high speeds will separate


suspensions.
Classification of Impure (Mixture) and Pure
Substances
Pure Substances: Elements
An element is a pure homogeneous substance that can NOT be
broken down into a simpler substance by chemical or physical
means.
An element is made up of one kind of atom. If it has molecules,
the molecules are combinations of one kind of atom only.
Two Classes of Elements: Metals and Nonmetals
Most elements are
metals that typically
are shiny, malleable
(mold like pasticine),
ductile (can be
drawn into wires)
and good
conductors of heat
and electricity.
Some elements are
nonmetals which
typically are dull,
crumbly, poor
conductors of heat
and electricity, and
may be gases.
Compounds
A compound is a homogeneous pure substance (fixed
properties) that is made up of molecules which have more than
one kind of atom.
Compounds CAN be broken down into simpler pure substances
(elements)
Compounds can be broken down into simpler
elements.

When orange mercuric oxide is heated, gaseous oxygen


and liquid mercury are formed.
Two Main Classes of Compounds: Ionic and Covalent
Ionic compounds are made Covalent compounds are
up of positive and negative made up of neutral
ions. These compounds molecules formed when
are formed from metallic nonmetallic atoms share
atoms and nonmetallic electrons with other
atoms when the metallic nonmetallic atoms.
atoms give one or more
electrons to the nonmetallic
atoms.
Particle Patterns in Substances
What would you classify foggy air as?
What would you classify paradichlorobenzene as?

PDB breaks down into carbon, chlorine and hydrogen.


Cooling curve of PDB shows a long flat line at 52.4
Celsius
The Law of Definite Proportions
When elements combine to form a compound, they
combine in a definite proportion by weight.
When carbon combines with oxygen, two
compounds are possible. In one the weight ratio is
16:12 (1.33:1) and in the other, 32:12 (2.67:1)

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