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✓ Properties of matter can be further classified according to whether they depend on the amount of substance
present or not:
PHASE CHANGES
✓ The relative magnitude of kinetic and potential energy among particles determine a substance’s state and also
changes of state
✓ In a closed system, each type of phase is REVERSIBLE, that is, reaches a state of dynamic equilibrium
HEATING COOLING-CURVE
- Depicts the change in temperature with heat gain or loss
- Within a phase change, temp changes as heat is added or removed
- During a phase change, temp is constant but Ep changes
PHASE DIAGRAM
✓ Critical Point
- Where liquid-gas line ends
- Critical temperature- 2 densities are equal and phase boundary disappears= supercritical fluid
- The pressure at this temperature is the Critical pressure
- at this point, vapor cannot be condensed
✓ Triple Point
- Where the 3-phase transition curves meet
- Pressure and temperature at w/c 3 phases are in equilibrium
- Phase diagrams for substances with several solid forms i.e. sulfur, have more than 1 triple point
COMPOSITION OF MATTER
1. ATOMS
- smallest unit of matter that retains its chemical properties (10nanometer)
- all atoms are composed of the same particles, but only differ in their number of PROTONS; it’s the number of
protons in an atom of an element that determines its identity
- atoms are electrically neutral; an atom contains equal numbers of electrons and protons
- made up of:
▪ nucleus
-within the nucleus are protons and neutrons(uncharged)
-the dense core of an atom; contains most of the mass
▪ electron
-orbit around nucleus; mass is much smaller than the nucleus
-equal in magnitude but opposite in sign, to the charge on a proton
- ATOMIC NUMBER(Z): number of protons in an atom (in the nucleus); same atomic number, same chemical
properties
- ATOMIC MASS: sum of masses of protons and neutrons of an atom
- ATOMIC WEIGHT: the average weight of an atom of an element taking into account the masses of all its
isotopes
- ISOTOPES: atoms of the same element having the same #of protons but different #of neutrons; same chem
properties but diff physical properties
2. MOLECULE
- Smallest unit of a compound that can have a stable independent existence
- Molecules that contain 2 or more atoms are called polyatomic molecules
12
c6 12 is the mass number; C is the name of atom; 6 is the atomic number
1. PURE SUBSTANCE
- Matter having an invariant chemical composition and distinct properties
- Made of only 1 type of atom or only 1 type of molecules (group of atoms bonded together)
- Cannot be separated into simpler substances by physical means, only by chemical methods
- Fixed composition; properties do not vary
A. Element
- Fundamental substance; cannot be decomposed into simpler substance
- 118 known elements in the periodic table arranged according to their atomic numbers
- Named by International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC)
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B. Compound
- Can be decomposed by chemical means into simpler substances; always in the same ratio by mass
- Composed of 2 or more elements in fixed ratio
- Organic: Carbon + O, H, N
- Inorganic: some contain carbon i.e. carbon monoxide/dioxide/sulfide, carbonates, cyanides
✓ LAW OF DEFINITE PROPORTIONS/CONSTANT COMPOSITION
: “ Different samples of any pure compound contain the same elements in the same proportions by mass”
CHEMICAL BONDS
- Attraction between atoms that results in formation of compounds
- Bonding lowers potential energy between positive and negative particles
- Type and strength of chemical bonds determine the properties of a substance
- strongest are ionic and covalent; weak bonds- indispensable bonds that temporarily adhere biomolecules in the
cell i.e. hydrogen bonds
✓ ELECTRONEGATIVITY- measure of ability of an atom attract electrons from other atoms in a molecule
✓ Van der Waals Forces- electrostatic forces described as asymmetrical distribution of the charge in the h2o
molecule, w/c holds it together
✓ Formula unit- molecular/ionic compounds
✓ Molecule- applies only to elements&compounds that exist as discrete molecules
✓ ANY COMPOUND IS ELECTRICALLY NEUTRAL
B. COVALENT BONDING
- Electron sharing; mostly nonmetal with nonmetal; most common type of bonding
- Shared electron pair is localized between 2 atoms as it spends most of its time there, linking them in a bond of a
particular length and strength
- SINGLE CB: 1 electron pair is shared between 2 atoms
- DOUBLE CB: 2 electron pairs shared between 2 atoms; i.e. alkenes
- TRIPLE CB: 2 atoms involve in 6 bonding electrons; i.e. alkynes
C. METALLIC BONDING
- electron pooling; metal with metal
- metals lose outer electrons easily but regains them not very readily
- electrons are delocalized, moving freely throughout the piece of metal
2. MIXTURE
- 2 or more substances mixed together but not chemically combined, in w/c each substances retains its own
composition and properties
- Composition is variable
- Can be separated by physical means
A. Homogenous
- Uniform properties and composition all throughout; have a single phase
▪ Solutions- contain 1 or more solutes in a solvent; all particles are individual atoms, ions, or small
molecules
• Solvent: substance capable of dissolving another substance; most abundant component of
a solution
• Solute: substance dissolved in the solvent
• Like-dissolves-like- solute & solvent have similar types & strengths of intermolecular
forces
• Miscible: soluble in each other in any proportion
• Solubility: maximum amount of solute that dissolves in a fixed amount of solvent
o Dilute- contains less dissolved solute than concentrated one
o Concentrated
• Unsaturated: solution contains less solute than solvent
• Saturated: contains maximum amount of dissolved solute; equilibrium concentration
• Supersaturated: solution that contains more than the equilibrium concentration
B. Heterogenous
- Has 2 or more phases; components can be easily separated from one another
- Can be classified depending on the size of the particle
▪ Suspension- particles spread through a liq. or gas but settle out after some time
▪ Colloids- “Colloidal suspension”;
• particles don’t settle over time; particles are intermediaries between those in a
solution&suspension
• larger than the size of molecule but smaller than what can be seen
• e.g. smoke, mayonnaise, jelly, paper
CHEMICAL FORMULAS
- it shows a substance’s chemical composition; represents the elements present& the ratio
- Noble gases (He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn) are usually isolated atoms in nature (single atom)
- Subscript=number of atoms in a molecule
- Allotropes/allotropic modifications: diff. forms of the same element in the same physical state (i.e., O2, O3)
STRUCTURAL FORMULA
- shows the order in w/c the atoms are connected
- the lines connecting atomic symbols represent chemical bonds between atoms; the ff. show the 1bonding sequence
and 2geometrical arrangements
o Ball-and-stick molecular model-balls to represent atoms and sticks for bonds (3D shapes)
o Space-filling molecular model- show (approximate) relative size of atoms and shapes of molecules
ELECTRON CONFIGURATION
- Electron configuration and strength of nucleus-electron attraction determine the properties of an atom.