Some Basic Definitions
Some Basic Definitions
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Chemistry studies matter and energy interactions by describing matter through physical and chemical properties, classifying it into elements, compounds, and mixtures, and distinguishing physical changes from chemical changes.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What chemistry studies: the interactions of matter with other matter and with energy.
- Two ways to describe matter: physical properties (characteristics as it exists) vs. chemical properties (how it changes form with other matter).
- Two types of change: physical change (alters physical properties without changing chemical composition) vs. chemical change (creates new matter with new properties).
- Common confusion: pure substances (elements and compounds) vs. mixtures (physical combinations); homogeneous mixtures (solutions) look uniform, heterogeneous mixtures show distinct components.
- Classifying elements: metals (shiny, conductive, malleable) vs. nonmetals (brittle, poor conductors) vs. semimetals (properties of both).
🧱 What matter is and how to describe it
🧱 Defining matter
Matter: anything that has mass and takes up space.
- Books, computers, food, dirt, and even air are all matter.
- Air is easy to overlook because it is thin, but it still has mass and occupies space.
- Things that are not matter: thoughts, ideas, emotions, hopes—these have no mass and take no space.
- Example: A hot dog is matter (has mass, takes up space); love is not matter (it is an emotion).
🔍 Physical properties
Physical properties: characteristics that describe matter as it exists.
- Examples: shape, color, size, temperature.
- An important physical property is the phase (or state) of matter.
- The three fundamental phases: solid, liquid, gas.
- Physical properties tell you what matter looks like or feels like right now, without changing what it is chemically.
⚗️ Chemical properties
Chemical properties: characteristics that describe how matter changes form in the presence of other matter.
- Examples: Does it burn? Does it react violently with water?
- Chemical properties reveal what matter can do when it interacts with other substances.
- Example: The fact that a match burns is a chemical property.
- Don't confuse: physical properties describe matter as-is; chemical properties describe how matter transforms.
🔄 Physical vs. chemical changes
🔄 Physical change
Physical change: when a sample of matter changes one or more of its physical properties.
- The chemical composition stays the same.
- Examples: solid ice melts into liquid water; alcohol in a thermometer expands or contracts with temperature.
- Example: Water in the air turns into snow—this is a physical change (gas phase → solid phase).
- Example: A person's hair is cut—this is a physical change (shortening length, no chemical reaction).
🔥 Chemical change
Chemical change: the process of demonstrating a chemical property.
- The chemical composition changes; new forms of matter with new physical properties are created.
- Example: Bread dough becomes fresh bread in an oven—chemical changes occur due to heat.
- Note: chemical changes are often accompanied by physical changes, because the new matter will have different physical properties.
- Example: A fire in a fireplace is a chemical change (burning); warming water for coffee is a physical change (temperature increase only).
🧪 Substances: elements and compounds
🧪 What a substance is
Substance: a sample of matter that has the same physical and chemical properties throughout.
- Sometimes called a "pure substance," but "pure" is not needed in the strict chemical definition.
- Chemistry has a specific definition for "substance" that differs from everyday vague usage.
- There are two types of substances: elements and compounds.
⚛️ Elements
Element: the simplest type of chemical substance; it cannot be broken down into simpler chemical substances by ordinary chemical means.
- About 115 elements are known; 80 are stable (the rest are radioactive).
- Each element has its own unique set of physical and chemical properties.
- Examples: iron, carbon, gold.
🧬 Compounds
Compound: a combination of more than one element.
- The physical and chemical properties of a compound are different from those of its constituent elements.
- A compound behaves as a completely different substance.
- Over 50 million compounds are known, with more discovered daily.
- Examples: water, penicillin, sodium chloride (table salt).
🥤 Mixtures: heterogeneous and homogeneous
🥤 What mixtures are
Mixtures: physical combinations of more than one substance.
- Mixtures are not pure substances; they contain multiple elements or compounds physically combined.
- There are two types: heterogeneous and homogeneous.
🌰 Heterogeneous mixtures
Heterogeneous mixture: a mixture composed of two or more substances where it is easy to tell that more than one substance is present.
- Sometimes visible to the naked eye.
- Example: A combination of salt crystals and steel wool—you can see which particles are salt and which are steel wool.
- Example: A mixture of iron metal filings and sulfur powder (assuming they are simply mixed together).
💧 Homogeneous mixtures (solutions)
Homogeneous mixture: a combination of two or more substances that is so intimately mixed that the mixture behaves as a single substance.
- Another word for homogeneous mixture is solution.
- Very difficult to tell that more than one substance is present, even with a powerful microscope.
- Example: Salt crystals dissolved in water—the mixture looks uniform.
- Example: Soda water (carbon dioxide dissolved in water); an amalgam (metals dissolved in mercury).
- Don't confuse: the human body is a heterogeneous mixture (you can distinguish organs, tissues, etc.); an amalgam is a homogeneous mixture (uniform throughout).
🪙 Classifying elements: metals, nonmetals, semimetals
🪙 Metals
Metal: an element that is solid at room temperature (with mercury as a well-known exception), is shiny and silvery, conducts electricity and heat well, can be pounded into thin sheets (malleability), and can be drawn into thin wires (ductility).
- Example: Iron is a metal because it is solid, shiny, and conducts electricity and heat well.
- Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature but has all other expected metal properties.
🌫️ Nonmetals
Nonmetal: an element that is brittle when solid, does not conduct electricity or heat very well, and cannot be made into thin sheets or wires.
- Nonmetals exist in a variety of phases and colors at room temperature.
- Example: Elemental sulfur is a yellow nonmetal, usually found as a powder.
- Example: Oxygen is a nonmetal (it is a gas at room temperature, does not conduct well).
⚙️ Semimetals (metalloids)
Semimetals (or metalloids): elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
- Example: Elemental carbon conducts heat and electricity well (metal-like) but is black, brittle, and cannot be made into sheets or wires (nonmetal-like).
- Example: Pure silicon is shiny and silvery (metal-like) but does not conduct electricity or heat well (nonmetal-like).
| Category | Key properties | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Metals | Shiny, conductive, malleable, ductile | Iron, mercury |
| Nonmetals | Brittle, poor conductors, various colors/phases | Sulfur, oxygen |
| Semimetals | Mix of metal and nonmetal properties | Carbon, silicon |
🌍 Chemistry in everyday life
🌍 Morning routine examples
The excerpt provides a "Chemistry Is Everywhere: In the Morning" sidebar with everyday examples:
- Shower/bath: Soap and shampoo contain chemicals that interact with oil and dirt to remove them; fragrances make you smell good.
- Brushing teeth: Toothpaste contains abrasives (tiny hard particles that physically scrub) and fluoride (chemically interacts with tooth surfaces to prevent cavities).
- Vitamins and medicines: Vitamins and supplements provide chemicals your body needs; medicines are chemicals that combat disease.
- Cooking eggs: Frying eggs involves heating them so a chemical reaction occurs to cook them.
- Digestion: Food in the stomach is chemically reacted so the body can absorb nutrients.
- Driving: Vehicles burn gasoline (a chemical change) to provide energy.
These examples show that chemistry is not abstract—it is present in personal hygiene, food preparation, health, and transportation.