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Question
- what are the characteristics of an extensive property of matter?
- name three examples of a heterogeneous mixture? cement, pea soup, apple sauce
- what are the characteristics of an intensive property of matter?
- give three examples of a homogeneous mixture?
- the two most important properties of all matter are (?)
- if a mixture is uniform in composition, it is said to be
- a measure of the quantity of matter is
- a solid substance has which characteristics?
- under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure, what are the characteristics of a gas?
- name four of the five stages of matter:
- name three examples of a chemical change:
- describe the following processes and what they separate: chromotography, distillation, evaporation and filtration
- define a chemical, compound, mixture, element, precipitate and a solution:
- compare and contrast the differences between a physical change and a chemical change and give examples:
Brief Explanations
- An extensive property of matter depends on the amount of matter present. Examples include mass and volume.
- Heterogeneous mixtures have non - uniform composition. Cement, pea soup, and apple sauce are correct examples as they have visible different parts.
- An intensive property of matter does not depend on the amount of matter. Examples are density and temperature.
- Homogeneous mixtures have uniform composition. Examples are salt water, air, and stainless steel.
- The two most important properties of all matter are mass and volume. Mass measures the amount of matter, and volume measures the space it occupies.
- If a mixture is uniform in composition, it is said to be homogeneous.
- A measure of the quantity of matter is mass.
- A solid substance has a definite shape and definite volume due to closely packed particles.
- Under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure, a gas has no definite shape and no definite volume, and it expands to fill its container.
- Four of the five stages of matter are solid, liquid, gas, and plasma.
- Three examples of a chemical change are burning wood, rusting of iron, and digestion of food.
- Chromatography separates components of a mixture based on their different affinities for a stationary and mobile phase. Distillation separates components based on differences in boiling points. Evaporation separates a soluble solid from a liquid by vaporizing the liquid. Filtration separates a solid - liquid mixture by passing the mixture through a filter medium that retains the solid.
- A chemical is a substance with a definite composition. A compound is a pure substance made up of two or more different elements chemically combined. A mixture is a combination of two or more substances that are not chemically combined. An element is a pure substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means. A precipitate is an insoluble solid that forms during a chemical reaction in solution. A solution is a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances.
- A physical change does not change the chemical composition of a substance, e.g., melting ice. A chemical change results in the formation of new substances with different chemical properties, e.g., burning paper.
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- Depends on amount of matter.
- Cement, pea soup, apple sauce.
- Does not depend on amount of matter.
- Salt water, air, stainless steel.
- Mass, volume.
- Homogeneous.
- Mass.
- Definite shape and volume.
- No definite shape or volume, expands to fill container.
- Solid, liquid, gas, plasma.
- Burning wood, rusting iron, digestion of food.
- Chromatography: separates by affinity; Distillation: separates by boiling - point; Evaporation: separates soluble solid from liquid; Filtration: separates solid - liquid mixture.
- Chemical: definite composition; Compound: elements chemically combined; Mixture: substances not chemically combined; Element: cannot be broken down; Precipitate: insoluble solid in reaction; Solution: homogeneous mixture.
- Physical change: no change in chemical composition (e.g., melting ice); Chemical change: new substances formed (e.g., burning paper).