[PDF] [PDF] Chapter 15 Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures

Homogenous Mixture • Solution When you drink a glass of whole or low-fat milk, you are drinking a mixture of water, fats, proteins, and other substances



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[PDF] Chapter 15 Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures

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1 Chapter 15 Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures Section 15.1 Types of Matter Terms: • Elements • Compound • Substance • Heterogeneous Mixture • Homogenous Mixture • Solution • Colloid • Tyndall Effect • Suspension Substances You can easily tell whether a line is drawn in ink or pencil. The lines look different because they are made of different materials. A pencil is made of several kinds of materi als. The m aterials t hat the pencil, and all matter exist as are classified by the units they are made of. Elements The units that make up all matter are called atoms. If all the atoms in a sample of matter have the same identify, that kind of matter is an element. The carbon used in a pencil point contains only carb atom s. Carbon is an element. The copper i n a penny is an example of another element. In a pure copper sample, all the atoms have the same identity. Altogether, there are 111 recognized elements. An atom is the base unit, or simplest form of an element.

1 6Compounds Materials called compounds are made from atoms of two or more elements that are combined chemically. The ratio of the d ifferent ato ms in a co mpound is always the same. For example, the elements hydrogen and oxygen can combine to form the compound water. The atoms of elements in water are present in the ratio of two hydrogen atoms to one oxygen atom. When was the last time you at a compound whose elements are a black solid and two invisible gases? One compound that fits this description is sugar. You can recognize sugar by its white crystals and sweet taste. But the elements that form sugar - carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen - are neither white nor sweet. Like sugar, compounds usually have a different appearance from the elements that make them up. Oxygen, carbon, water, sugar, baking soda, and salt are examples of materials classified as substances. A substance is either an element or a compound .

1 7Mixtures When you have a sore throat, do you gargle with salt water? Salt water is classified as a mixture. A mixture such as salt water is a material made up of two or more substances that can be separated by physical means. Unlike compounds, mixtures do not always contain the same amounts of the different substances that them up. You may be wearing clothing made of permanent-press fabric. This fabric is a mixt ure of fi bers of two materials - polyester and cotton. The fabric may contain varying amounts of both materials. A mixture in which different materials can be easily distinguished is called heterogeneous mixtures . Pe rmanent-press fabrics are heterogeneous mixtures, and you can detect the differ ent materials by sight or with a microscope. Granite, concrete, an d pizza, and dry soup mixes are examples of other heterogeneous mixtures. Solutions The salt water you gargle with looks like water and tastes salty. Like polyester-cotton fabric, salt water is in some ways similar to the substances it contains. But you can't see the particles in salt water even with a microscope. A material, such as salt water, in which two or more substan ces are u niformly spread out is a

1 8homogeneous mixture. For example, rubbing alcohol is a common disinfectant. It appears clear, even though it is made up of particles of alcohol in water. A solution is another name for a homogeneous mixture. Particles in solutions are so small that they cannot be seen even with a microscope. These particles will never set tle to the bot tom of their contain er. Soluti ons remain constantly and uniformly mixed. Substances and mixtures are summarized in the figure below. Colloids and Suspensions When you drink a glass of whole or low-fat milk, you are d rinking a mix ture of wate r, fats, proteins, and oth er substances. Milk is a colloid. A colloid is a heterogeneous mixture that, like a solution, never settles. One way to tell a colloid from a solution is show in the right figure. Milk particles scatter light. The scattering of light by particles In a mixture is called the Tyndall effect. You can see the Tyndall effect in all colloids. Some mixtures are neither solutions nor colloids. If you fill a glass with pond water, you may notice that the water is slightly muddy. If you let it stand long enough, the silt will fall to the bottom of the glass and the water will clear. River deltas are examples of what happens when muddy water slows down and suspended soil particles settl e out . Muddy water is a suspension. A suspension is a heterogeneous mixture containing a liquid in which visible particles settle. Another example of a suspension is glacial meltwater, which has a milky ap pearance. Particle s carried b y the meltwater settle out, forming glacial deposits such as alluvial fans. Summary • There are more than 100 elements that combine in a multitude of ways to produce compounds that make up all of the living and nonliving things that we encounter. • Elements and compounds are substances; a mixture is composed of two or more substances. • A solution is a homogeneous mixture. Colloids and suspensions are two kinds of heterogeneous mixtures.

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