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Lesson 1

This document provides information about the classification and properties of matter. It discusses the three common states of matter - solid, liquid, and gas. Solids have a definite shape and volume, liquids have a definite volume but no shape, and gases have no definite shape or volume. Matter can be classified as pure substances or mixtures. Pure substances are either elements or compounds, while mixtures contain two or more substances mixed together. The document also describes physical and chemical properties of matter and different types of physical changes and chemical changes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views7 pages

Lesson 1

This document provides information about the classification and properties of matter. It discusses the three common states of matter - solid, liquid, and gas. Solids have a definite shape and volume, liquids have a definite volume but no shape, and gases have no definite shape or volume. Matter can be classified as pure substances or mixtures. Pure substances are either elements or compounds, while mixtures contain two or more substances mixed together. The document also describes physical and chemical properties of matter and different types of physical changes and chemical changes.

Uploaded by

damo.desipulo.up
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MATTER  High compressible because

molecule are far apart


 Is anything that occupies space
 Carbon dioxide, oxygen
and has mass/weight

COMMON STATES
CLASSIFCATION OF
 SOLID
 LIQUID MATTER:
 GAS  PURE SUBSTANCE
 MIXTURE

SOLID

 Has definite volume PURE SUBSTANCE


 Shape can be independent of its  Form of water with definite
container (constant) composition and
distinct form of properties
TYPES OF SOLID:
 Simplest form of matter
 CRYSTALLINE
 AMORPHOUS SOLID CLASSIFICATION OF
PURE SUBSTANCES:
 ELEMENT
 CRYSTALLINE  COMPOUND
o Materials which exist in
regular, repeating  ELEMENT
geometric patterns o Substance that cannot be
o Salt, sugar, ice cubes decomposed into simpler
 AMORPHOUS SOLID substances by chemical or
o Solids with no shape or physical means.
form of geometric o 117 elements
configuration is irregular  COMPOUND
o Plastics, glass, gels, and o Composed of 2 or more
asphalt elements chemically
LIQUID compound in definite and
constant proportions
 Has definite volume but no specific  Can be broken
shape down into
 Very slightly compressible elements by
 Wine, alcohol, water chemical
processes.
GAS
MIXTURE
 No fixed volume or shape
 Combination of 2 or more pure  FOAM (gas in solid or liquid)
substances in variable proportions  EMULSION (liquid in liquid)
 Sea water, gasoline, wine

TYPES OF MIXTURE:  SUSPENSION


 HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURE o Parts may be
 HETEROGENEOUS MIXTURE distinguished, materials
are heavy enough to settle
down
 HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURE o Muddy water
o same properties  COARSE
throughout the system o Are very large,
o one phase only distinguishable even under
 HETEROGENEOUS MIXTURE the unaided eye
o remain essentially the
same
o having two or more phase. PROPERTIES OF MATTER

PROPERTIES
TYPES OF
HETEROGENEOUS Are those qualities or characteristics
possessed by a substance by which we are
 COLLOIDS able to identify the form of matter from
 SUSPENSION another
 COARSE
CLASSIFICATION OF PROPERTIES

 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
 COLLOIDS  CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
o Particles can be seen
though TYNDALL EFFECT
 Effect if light  PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
scattering in
Can be observe without changing
colloidal dispersion
the composition of substance
while showing no
light in a true TYPES OF PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
solution
 INTENSIVE PROPERTIES
TYPES/ CLASSIFICATION  EXTENSIVE PROPERTIES
 INTENSIVE PROPERTIES
OF COLLOIDS
o Change in quantity on
 SOL (solid in gas) which depend on the
 GEL (liquid in solid) amount
 AEROSOL (liquid to solid) (solid in o Color, taste, odor,
gas) hardness, density, specific
gravity, boiling point, in fundamental
freezing point. components
 EXTENSIVE PROPERTIES o Most common changes
o Do not depend on the are changes of state: solid-
amount liquid-gas
o Weight, mass, volume,
length, width, thickness,
area, height  CHEMICAL CHANGE
. o Involves change which
 CHEMICAL PROPERTIES result in the disappearance
o Having ability to change of the substance and
into new and completely formation of new
different substance. substance
 Flammability o Also called reactions
(ability to burn)
-burning of paper,
ash EVIDENCES OF CHEMICAL CHANGE
 Reactivity with air
(oxygen) – rust 1. Evolution of heat and light
(taya) 2. Evolution of gas
 Reactivity with 3. Formation of precipitate
another element 4. Production of mechanical
or compound to energy
produce different 5. Production of electrical energy
compound MEASUREMENT
-sodium and
chlorine = salt  ACCURACY
 Corrosiveness/ o How close a measurement
reactivity with an is the true or correct
acid (statues  PRECISION
corroded) o How close a set of
measurement for quantity
CHANGES OF MATTER is to one another.
TWO TYPES: SYSTEM UNITS
 PHYSICAL CHANGE  METRIC SYSTEM
 CHEMICAL CHANGE  ENGLISH SYSTEM

 PHYSICAL CHANGE  METRIC SYSTEM (SI)


o Change in one or physical o Accepted worldwide
properties but no change o Originally described as
MKS system
 ENGLISH SYSTEM DENSE CENTRAL CORE (NUCLEUS)
o Commonly used in English-
 mass is centered
speaking countries, also
 has positively charged particles
known as British system
 emits alphas particles
 has a diameter of about 10^-13 cm
 responsible in the physical
property of an atom.
LESSON 2 THE ELECTRON CLOUD
ATOM  Found outside the dense central
 core
 Fundamental unit of which  Moves about the nucleus at an
elements are composed average distance of about 10 ^-8
cm from it.
 It has a negatively charged particle
DALTON’S ATOMIC THEORY (JOHN  Responsible in the chemical
DALTON) property of an atom

 All matter composed a very small


particles called atom. BOHR’S THEORY (NEILS BOHR)
 Atoms cannot be broken down
into smaller pieces  Atom is described as like as
 Atoms of an element are identical miniature of a solar system
and therefore have the same mass  The dense sunlight core is the
 Atoms are neither created nor nucleus and the planets evolving
destroyed but simply rearranged in around the sun are electrons
a chemical reaction (LAW OF which revolves around the nucleus
CONSERVATION OF MASS) following the constantly changing
 Atoms combined in a specific path called shell
ratios to form a compound (LAW
OF DEFINITE PROPORTIONS)
MODERN ATOMIC THEORY:
TRUTHERFORD’S THEORY (ERNEST
RUTHERFORD) It is found out that atoms are made up of
sobotomic particles
Atoms is composed in two main parts:
 PROTONS
 The dense central core (NUCLEUS)  NEUTRONS
 The electron cloud  ELECTRONS

PROTONS AND NEUTRONS

 Located inside the nucleus


 Sometimes called nucleos
ELECTRONS  It can have values of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
and 7.
 At the shell and move around the
nucleus Also represented by letters is starting from
K for n=1
These three make up an atom have
definite charges and masses. L for n=2
ELECTRON PROTONS NEUTRON M for n=3
S S
Charge -1 +1 0 Etc.
Mass 0.000549 1.00782 1.00867
(amu)
Mass 0.1094x10 1.6726x1 1.6749x1
(grams) 0 0 The maximum numbers of Electrons in
Locations At the Nucleus Nucleus each energy level is equal to 2n
shell
Discovere JJ. Rutherfor James
r Thomson d Chadwick
No electrons in the shell = 2n

1st shell (K shell)


MASS NUMBER
N=1
 The total amount of numbers of
No. e = 2(1)= 2
protons and neutrons in the
nucleus of an atom

2nd Shell (L shell)


NUMBER OF PROTON N= 2
 Mass number – number of No. e+ 2(2)= 8
neutrons.

Each main energy level has a sub shell or


ATOMIC NUMBER sub level
 Number of protons in the nucleus ORBITALS
of an atom; each element has a
unique atomic number.  The space occupied by one pair of
Electrons.

ELECTRON DISTRIBUTION
ELECTRON CONFIGURATION
 Electrons are distributed in the
shell or main energy level  The distribution of electrons in the
 Principle quantum number (n) orbitals of an atom
 These some shells are the SPDF
 Used to express the main energy
orbitals
level of an electron
 There is 1 orbital for S, 3 orbitals
for P, 5 orbitals for D, and 7
orbitals for F
 The maximum number of electrons Paramagnetic substances
in each sub shells are;
Atoms that contains unfair electrons
 2e for S Orbital, 6 for P, 10 for D
and 14 for F orbital. They are attracted to magnet

Elements are represented by a nuclide


chemical symbol with atomic number of Z
and Mass number A

The mass number of an atom is equal to


that total number of heavy particles called
protons and neutrons

Number of proton is the nucleus of an


atom is known as atomic number Z

The number of Protons is equal to the


number of Electrons around the nucleus
because an atom is electrically neutral

The atomic mass unit is defined as exactly


1-twelfth the mass of a carbon atom that has
six protons and six nutrients in its nucleus

HUND’S RULE: ELEMENT X

 No two electrons can pair up  Consists of atoms with a specific


unless each orbital are filled up number of broad buns in the
nucleus

ISOTOPES
 Atoms with the same number of
protons but different numbers of
neutrons

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