CHM102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Boiling Point

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30 Jun 2018
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Properties of Matter
Physical properties
- Can be measured without changing the identity and composition of the
substance
- (e.g. colour, odour, density, melting point, boiling point, hardness)
Chemical properties
- The way a substance may change (REACT) to form other substance
- (e.g. flammability).
Intensive properties
- Do not depend on the amount of substance present
- (e.g. density).
Extensive properties
- Change with the amount present-
- E.g.volume.
Physical changes
- substance changes its physical appearance, but not its composition (e.g.
evaporation).
- All changes of state (between solid, liquid, gas) are physical changes.
Chemical changes (reactions)
- Result in the formation of a chemically different substance.
Law of Constant Composition
- Pure substance- has distinct properties and a composition that doesn’t vary
between samples.
- Elements- cannot be decomposed into simpler substances (may be atoms or
molecules)
- Compounds- composed of two or more types of atoms (elements).
- The elemental composition of a pure compound is always the same.
Mixtures
- Mixtures- combinations of substances that can be separated by various means.
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Document Summary

Can be measured without changing the identity and composition of the substance (e. g. colour, odour, density, melting point, boiling point, hardness) The way a substance may change (react) to form other substance (e. g. flammability). Do not depend on the amount of substance present (e. g. density). Physical changes substance changes its physical appearance, but not its composition (e. g. evaporation). All changes of state (between solid, liquid, gas) are physical changes. Result in the formation of a chemically different substance. Pure substance- has distinct properties and a composition that doesn"t vary between samples. Elements- cannot be decomposed into simpler substances (may be atoms or molecules) Compounds- composed of two or more types of atoms (elements). The elemental composition of a pure compound is always the same. Mixtures- combinations of substances that can be separated by various means. Components (and properties) may vary within the sample (heterogeneous), or be uniformly dispersed (homogeneous).

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