1) The document discusses atoms, elements, compounds, and mixtures. It aims to explain what an atom is, differentiate between elements, compounds and mixtures, and give examples of each.
2) Atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter and are very small. Elements are substances made of only one type of atom that cannot be broken down further.
3) Compounds are formed when two or more elements are chemically bonded together and have different properties than the original elements. Mixtures contain two or more substances that are not chemically bonded and can be separated.
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Atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures.pptx
1. Learning Objectives
1) To be able to explain what an atom is
2) To state the differences between elements, compounds and
mixtures
3) Be able to give examples of elements, compounds and
mixtures
4) To be able to make a compound from its elements
Atoms, Elements,
Compounds & Mixtures
2. What are atoms?
• Copper is a metal that can be used for wires and pipes.
• If we zoomed in trillions of times we would see tiny
particles – these are known as atoms
Atoms make up you, the Earth, stars and everything else
3. Atom Facts
Atoms are the basic building block of all matter and are very
small.
• Your body is made of 7 billion, billion, billion, atoms
• Each year 98% of your atoms are replaced for new ones
• 50 million atoms lined side by side would be as wide as a
full stop.
• If you counted every grain of sand on Earth you would have
nearly the same number of atoms in one grain of sand
4. Atoms and Elements
• Some chemicals are made of only one type of atom and
some are made of two or more atoms joined together
Elements are substances that are
made up of only one type of atom
They cannot be broken down into anything simpler
5. What is an element?
Which is an element? Explain your answer
The box on the left is an element
– it is made of only one type of atom
6. Element or Compound?
two elements a compound
When two (or more) elements are chemically
joined together they form compounds
7. Elements & Compounds
• When elements join together they behave in different
ways than when as elements.
• Example: hydrogen and oxygen react to form water
• On a mini whiteboard write down all the similarities
and differences between oxygen, hydrogen and water
Similarities Differences
8. What is a mixture?
Why is the following not a compound?
two elements a mixture
A mixture contains two or more substances that
are not joined together. They can be separated
10. Separating Mixtures
• Iron and sulfur are elements – they are each made of
only one type of atom.
• If mixed together how would you separate them?
• Complete the experiment to separate the mixture
• Using a magnet – iron is magnetic
11. Making Compounds
• When iron and sulfur react together they form a
compound, iron sulfide
• How would you know if you had formed a compound?
• The iron sulfide is not magnetic
Editor's Notes
These are very much approximations/ educated guesses – the idea is to make the pupils go “Wow!”
Students to use mini-whiteboards for this activity
Students to use mini-whiteboards for this activity
Students to use mini-whiteboards for this activity
Students to use mini-whiteboards for this activity
Students to use mini-whiteboards for this activity