Grade 7 Science
Unit 3: Mixtures and Solutions
Chapter 9: Many useful products depend on
technology for separating mixtures and
solutions.
Name:
Homeroom #:
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Separating Mixtures
Mixtures Method of Separation Explanation
1. Salt Water
2. Muddy Water
3. Nuts and Bolts
4. Iron filings and sand
5.Vegetable oil and sand
6. Vegetable oil and water
7. Salt and pepper
Are the components you have separated still mixtures or are they pure? Explain your answer.
Separation Techniques
1. Mechanical Sorting
Used to separate the parts of a mixture based on such as particle size.
Examples: and
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2. Filtration
A common way to separate particles from a mixture.
Filters can have holes of varying sizes… to
Examples:
3. Evaporation
Changes of state from a to a
Used to recover a solid from a
4. Distillation
Uses two changes of state: and
It allows you to recover BOTH the and the from a
solution.
5. Paper Chromatography
Used to separate the substances in a mixture such as
Used to separate the in a mixture.
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Key Words
Evaporation:
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Filtration:
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Mechanical Sorting:
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Paper Chromatography:
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Simple Distillation:
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Comprehension Questions
1. Why is it easier to separate the parts of a heterogeneous mixture than the parts of a
homogeneous mixture?
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2. Why is the size of the holes in a filter important for filtration?
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3. Which part or parts of a solution does evaporation recover; the solute, the solvent, or
both?
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4. Which part or parts of a solution does distillation recover; the solute, the solvent, or
both?
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5. What is chromatography?
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6. How does paper chromatography work?
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7. Explain how you could separate each of the following mixtures:
a) Wood chips and pieces of granite rock.
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b) Iron filings and wood sawdust.
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c) Salt and pepper.
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Unit 3 Summary
Chapter 7 Matter can be classified as mixtures or pure substances.
Matter can be either mixtures or pure substances. (7.1)
Mixtures may be either heterogeneous or homogeneous. (7.1)
Homogeneous mixtures (solutions) have the same properties throughout. (7.1)
Heterogeneous mixtures have different visible parts with different properties. (7.1)
Matter is either a mixture or a pure substance based on the types of particles that
make it up. (7.2)
Each pure substance has its own type of particle, which is different from the kinds of
particles that make up all other pure substances. (7.2)
Chapter 8 Some substances dissolve to form solutions faster and more
easily than others.
In a solution, the substance that dissolves is the solute, and the substance in which
the solute dissolves is the solvent. (8.1)
A substance is soluble in a solvent if it dissolves in the solvent. A substance is
insoluble in a solvent if it does not dissolve in the solvent. (8.1)
A concentrated solution has a larger mass of solute for certain volume of solvent. A
dilute solution has a smaller mass of solute for a certain volume of solvent. (8.2)
Solution concentration may be expressed in units of grams of solute per litre of
solvent (g/L). (8.2)
A solution is saturated when as much solute has dissolved in a solvent as it can, at a
certain temperature. (8.2)
Different solutes have different solubilities, which may be increased by increasing the
temperature. (8.2)
Stirring a solution increases the rate of dissolving but not the solubility of the solute.
(8.2)
Chapter 9 Many useful products depend on technology for separating
mixtures and solutions.
Heterogeneous mixtures may be separated by methods that include sorting by hand,
mechanical sorting, and filtration. (9.1)
Mechanical sorting of a mixture is based on properties such as particle size and
magnetism. (9.1)
Homogeneous mixtures may be separated by methods that include evaporation,
distillation, and paper chromatography. (9.1)
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Unit 3 Review
Circle the letter of the best answer.
1. Which is the method that is used to separate and recover the parts of a liquid
solution?
A. condensation
B. distillation
C. evaporation
D. saturation
2. Which of the following is an example of a solution?
A. oil in water
B. oxygen in air
C. pepper in water
D. dust in air
3. Which of the following is a homogeneous mixture?
A. antifreeze
B. gold ore
C. milk
D. petroleum
4. Which of the following lists contains all pure substances?
A. gold, oxygen, carbon dioxide
B. milk, water, copper
C. squeezed orange juice, silver, soda water
D. tea, salt, concrete
5. In the following list of substances, which is the most soluble in water?
A. carbon dioxide
B. ethanol
C. sugar
D. table salt
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6. Which of the following labels for the picture below is correct?
A. solute + solvent = solution
B. solvent + solute = saturation
C. solvent + solute = soluble
D. solvent + solute = solution
In the space beside each letter, write the numeral of the choice that is the best match.
Each numeral choice may be used only once.
A ___
Pure Substances B ___
C ___ E ___
D ___ F ___
G ___ J ___
H ___ K ___
I ___ L ___
7. Mixtures
8. Homogeneous
9. Heterogeneous
10. Matter
11. contain two or more components
12. composition varies within the sample and from one sample to another
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13. hard to see the different parts
14. the one component is made up of just one type of particle
15. composition is the same throughout the sample and from one sample to
another
16. each component keeps its own properties
17. easy to see the different parts
18. contains only one component
19. In the space below, write a suitable title for the flowchart.
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Short Answer Questions
20. One way to increase the rate that a solute dissolves in a solvent is to stir the
mixture. Name two other ways to increase the rate of dissolving.
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21. If a spoonful of cornstarch is added to a glass of water, a cloudy mixture results.
Describe two ways to separate the two parts of this mixture.
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22. Many common activities at home and in industry involve separating mixtures.
Identify four examples or situations that illustrate this statement.
(1) ______________________________ (3) ______________________________
(2) ______________________________ (4) ______________________________
23. The concentration of solutions can be expressed in units that include g/L, ppm, and
%. Give one example of a product whose concentration is expressed in each unit.
(1) ______________________________ (3) ______________________________
(2) ______________________________