Chapter 1 - Chemical Foundations AAAA
Chapter 1 - Chemical Foundations AAAA
Chapter 1 - Chemical Foundations AAAA
Chemical Foundations
Section 1.1
Chemistry: An Overview
Atoms vs. Molecules
Matter is composed of tiny particles called atoms.
Atom: smallest part of an element that is still that element.
Molecule: Two or more atoms joined and acting as a unit.
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Section 1.1
Chemistry: An Overview
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Section 1.2
The Scientific Method
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Section 1.2
The Scientific Method
Scientific Models
Law
• A summary of repeatable observed (measurable) behavior.
Hypothesis
• A possible explanation for an observation.
Theory (Model)
• Set of tested hypotheses that gives an overall explanation of
some natural phenomenon.
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Section 1.3
Units of Measurement
Nature of Measurement
Measurement
• Quantitative observation consisting of two parts.
number
scale (unit)
• Examples
20 grams
6.63 × 10-34 joule·second
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Section 1.3
Units of Measurement
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Section 1.3
Units of Measurement
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Section 1.3
Units of Measurement
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Section 1.4
Uncertainty in Measurement
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Section 1.4
Uncertainty in Measurement
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Section 1.4
Uncertainty in Measurement
Precision
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Section 1.4
Uncertainty in Measurement
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
Exponential Notation
Example
300. written as 3.00 × 102
Contains three significant figures.
Two Advantages
Number of significant figures can be easily indicated.
Fewer zeros are needed to write a very large or very
small number.
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
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Section 1.5
Significant Figures and Calculations
CONCEPT CHECK!
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Section 1.7
Dimensional Analysis
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Section 1.7
Dimensional Analysis
Example #1
A golfer putted a golf ball 6.8 ft across a green. How
many inches does this represent?
• To convert from one unit to another, use the
equivalence statement that relates the two units.
1 ft = 12 in
1 ft 12 in
and
12 in 1 ft
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Section 1.7
Dimensional Analysis
Example #1
A golfer putted a golf ball 6.8 ft across a green. How many
inches does this represent?
Derive the appropriate unit factor by looking at the direction of
the required change (to cancel the unwanted units).
12 in
6.8 ft in
1 ft
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Section 1.7
Dimensional Analysis
Example #1
A golfer putted a golf ball 6.8 ft across a green. How many
inches does this represent?
Multiply the quantity to be converted by the unit factor to give
the quantity with the desired units.
12 in
6.8 ft 82 in
1 ft
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Section 1.7
Dimensional Analysis
Example #2
1 kg 1000 g
4.50 lbs = 2.04 103 g
2.2046 lbs 1 kg
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Section 1.8
Temperature
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Section 1.8
Temperature
9 F
TC
5
TF 32 F
9F
C
TF TC + 32F
5C
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Section 1.8
Temperature
EXERCISE!
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Section 1.8
Temperature
EXERCISE!
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Section 1.8
Temperature
EXERCISE!
TC T F
5
32F
9F
C
x 5
x 32F
9F
C
x 40
So 40C = 40F
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Section 1.9
Density
mass
Density =
volume
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Section 1.9
Density
Example #1
A certain mineral has a mass of 17.8 g and a volume
of 2.35 cm3. What is the density of this mineral?
mass
Density =
volume
17.8 g
Density =
2.35 cm3
3
Density = 7.57 g/cm
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Section 1.9
Density
Example #2
What is the mass of a 49.6-mL sample of a liquid,
which has a density of 0.85 g/mL?
mass
Density =
volume
x
0.85 g/mL =
49.6 mL
mass = x = 42 g
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Section 1.9
Density
Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Matter
Anything occupying space and having mass.
Matter exists in three states.
Solid
Liquid
Gas
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Solid
Rigid
Has fixed volume and shape.
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Liquid
Has definite volume but no specific shape.
Assumes shape of container.
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Gas
Has no fixed volume or shape.
Takes on the shape and volume of its container.
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Mixtures
Have variable composition.
Homogeneous Mixture
Having visibly indistinguishable parts; solution.
Heterogeneous Mixture
Having visibly distinguishable parts.
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
CONCEPT CHECK!
Pure water
Gasoline
Jar of jelly beans
Soil
Copper metal
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Physical Change
Change in the form of a substance, not in its chemical
composition.
Example: boiling or freezing water
Can be used to separate a mixture into pure
compounds, but it will not break compounds into
elements.
Distillation
Filtration
Chromatography
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
Chemical Change
A given substance becomes a new substance or
substances with different properties and different
composition.
Example: Bunsen burner (methane reacts with
oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water)
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
CONCEPT CHECK!
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Section 1.10
Classification of Matter
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