Properties of Matter - Teaching Science in Elementary Grades

DannielJaneAbordo 439 views 36 slides Mar 13, 2024
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About This Presentation

Properties of Matter


Slide Content

Properties of Matter

What is matter?
Anything made of particles. It has mass and
volume (takes up space). Matter can be in
the form of a solid, liquid, or gas.

Physical Property-A trait of
matter that can be observed or
measured without changing the
chemical composition of the
matter.
No chemical reactions allowed!

1. Color–how the object
absorbs and reflects light

2. Texture–how the
substance looks and feels.

3. Temperature
A measure of
the average
kinetic energy
(energy of
motion) of
particles in a
substance.

4. Mass
The amount
of matter in
an object (in
g or kg).

5. Volume
The amount
of space an
object
occupies (in
mL, L, cm
3
,
m
3
, etc.)

6. Density–the ratio of mass to
volume; reflects the degree of
packing of particles in matter.
D = m/v

Lowest density element:
Hydrogen
0.0009 g/cm
3

Highest density element:
Osmium
23 g/cm
3

7. Luster
The way that
a substance
reflects light
(metallic,
non-metallic,
glassy,
pearly, dull).

8. Ductility
Ability of a
substance to
be stretched
into a wire.

9. Malleability
Ability of a
substance to
be hammered
flat and to
retain the new
shape.

10. State(phase) of matter
What is the 4
th
state of
matter (rare on Earth)?

11)Melting Point/Freezing
Point -
The exact temperature at
which a solid becomes a
liquid or a liquid becomes
a solid.
For H
2O, what
temperature is this?
12) Boiling Point/
Condensation Point -
The exact temperature at
which a liquid becomes a
gas or a gas becomes a
liquid.
For H
2O, what
temperature is this?
EVERY PURE SUBSTANCE HAS AN
EXACT MELTING/FREEZING POINT
AND AN EXACT
BOILING/CONDENSATION POINT!

Intensive vs. Extensive
Properties of Matter
Intensive property-One
that DOES NOT depend
on the amount of the
substance present.
Examples so far:
Extensive property-One
that DOES depend on
the amount of the
substance present.
Examples so far:

Intensive propertiesare determined by the chemical
composition of the particles and their structure
(arrangement). (intensive ~ internal)

Extensive Properties
•Depend only on the number of particles,
not on their composition or internal
arrangement.
(extensive ~ external)

Chemical Property-A trait of matter
that can only be observed if a
substance has the property. In the
process of testing the chemical
property, the substance changes
composition if it has that property.
i.e. Does the substance chemically
“react with”something else?

1)Reactivity with oxygen :
rusting (iron)
tarnishing (silver, copper, brass, etc)

2) Reactivity with water:

3) Reactivity with acids or bases:

4)Combustibility or Flammability:

5) Chemical formula (chemical composition):
What something is made of is alwaysa
chemical property.
Ex: rust is Fe
2O
3
water is H
2O
diamond is C

Allchemical properties are
intensive. None are extensive.
•Why?
•Because chemical properties never
depend on how much of a substance is
present, but only on what kind of particles
make up the substance.

What is a Characteristic
Property?

A characteristic propertyis
-a distinctive property that helps you
determine the identityof a material.
Properties that AREcharacteristic:
Properties that are NOTcharacteristic:

Take out your notes from
yesterday…
•A few more physical properties that have
to do with today’s lab activity…….

13. Hardness
Measure of
how easily a
material is
scratched.
MOH’S HARDNESS SCALE
10 Diamond
6.5 Ceramic
5.5 Glass
3.5 Penny
2.5 Fingernail
1 Talc

What is the
hardness of
a material
that
scratched
your
fingernail but
not a penny?
MOH’S HARDNESS SCALE
10 Diamond
6.5 Ceramic
5.5 Glass
3.5 Penny
2.5 Fingernail
1 Talc

14. Streak
The color left
behind when
a material is
rubbed
against a
porcelain
plate
(warning:
streak can
be white).

14. Shape(the shape of
crystals is called “habit”).

Some common crystal
shapes/habits.
Cubic
Octahedral
Rhombohedral
Amorphous

Which are better
characteristic properties?
Intensive properties,
or
Extensive properties?

Intensive properties make the
best characteristic properties
because…
Intensive properties are determined
by the composition and structure
of matter. They never change!
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