CHEM 001 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Bunsen Burner, Elution, Distillation

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Having visibly indistinguishable parts; often called a. Change in the form (or state) of a substance, not in its chemical composition. Can be used to separate a mixture into pure compounds, but it will not break compounds into elements. Distillation (differences in volatility of a substance) Filtration (separates a liquid from a solid) Chromatography (use a mobile phase and a stationary phase to separate mixtures) A given substance becomes a new substance or substances with different properties and different composition (from the initial subst: example: bunsen burner (methane reacts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water) Greeks were the first to attempt to explain why chemical changes occur. Each element is made up of tiny particles called atoms. The atoms of a given element are identical; the atoms of different elements are different in some fundamental way or ways. Chemical compounds are formed when atoms of different elements combine with each other.

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