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1.2: The Classification of Matter

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    68017
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    Learning Objectives

    • Use physical and chemical properties, including phase, to describe matter.
    • Identify a sample of matter as an element, a compound, or a mixture.

    Part of understanding matter is being able to describe it. One way chemists describe matter is to assign different kinds of properties to different categories.

    Physical and Chemical Properties

    The properties that chemists use to describe matter fall into two general categories. Physical properties are characteristics that describe matter. They include characteristics such as size, shape, color, and mass. Chemical properties are characteristics that describe how matter changes its chemical structure or composition. An example of a chemical property is flammability—a material’s ability to burn—because burning (also known as combustion) changes the chemical composition of a material.

    Elements and Compounds

    Any sample of matter that has the same physical and chemical properties throughout the sample is called a substance. There are two types of substances. A substance that cannot be broken down into chemically simpler components is an element. Aluminum, which is used in soda cans, is an element. A substance that can be broken down into chemically simpler components (because it has more than one element) is a compound (Figure 1.2). Water is a compound composed of the elements hydrogen and oxygen. Today, there are about 118 elements in the known universe. In contrast, scientists have identified tens of millions of different compounds to date.

    Sometimes the word pure is added to substance, but this is not absolutely necessary. By definition, any single substance is pure.

    The smallest part of an element that maintains the identity of that element is called an atom. Atoms are extremely tiny; to make a line 1 inch long, you would need 217 million iron atoms. The smallest part of a compound that maintains the identity of that compound is called a molecule. Molecules are composed of atoms that are attached together and behave as a unit. Scientists usually work with millions and millions of atoms and molecules at a time. When a scientist is working with large numbers of atoms or molecules at a time, the scientist is studying the macroscopic view of the universe. However, scientists can also describe chemical events on the level of individual atoms or molecules, which is referred to as the microscopic viewpoint. We will see examples of both macroscopic and microscopic viewpoints throughout this book (Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)).

    1.jpg

    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): How Many Particles Are Needed for a Period in a Sentence?

    Although we do not notice it from a macroscopic perspective, matter is composed of microscopic particles so tiny that billions of them are needed to make a speck we can see with the naked eye. The ×25 and ×400,000,000 indicate the number of times the image is magnified.

    Mixtures

    A material composed of two or more substances is a mixture. In a mixture, the individual substances maintain their chemical identities. Many mixtures are obvious combinations of two or more substances, such as a mixture of sand and water. Such mixtures are called heterogeneous mixtures. In some mixtures, the components are so intimately combined that they act like a single substance (even though they are not). Mixtures with a consistent composition throughout are called homogeneous mixtures (or solutions). Sugar dissolved in water is an example of a solution. A metal alloy, such as steel, is an example of a solid solution. Air, a mixture of mainly nitrogen and oxygen, is a gaseous solution.

    Example \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    How would a chemist categorize each example of matter?

    1. saltwater
    2. soil
    3. water
    4. oxygen

    Solution

    1. Saltwater acts as if it were a single substance even though it contains two substances—salt and water. Saltwater is a homogeneous mixture, or a solution.
    2. Soil is composed of small pieces of a variety of materials, so it is a heterogeneous mixture.
    3. Water is a substance; more specifically, because water is composed of hydrogen and oxygen, it is a compound.
    4. Oxygen, a substance, is an element.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    How would a chemist categorize each example of matter?

    1. coffee
    2. hydrogen
    3. an egg

    Phases

    Another way to classify matter is to describe it as a solid, a liquid, or a gas, which was done in the examples of solutions. These three descriptions, each implying that the matter has certain physical properties, represent the three phases of matter. A solid has a definite shape and a definite volume. Liquids ordinarily have a definite volume but not a definite shape; they take the shape of their containers. Gases have neither a definite shape nor a definite volume, and they expand to fill their containers. We encounter matter in each phase every day; in fact, we regularly encounter water in all three phases: ice (solid), water (liquid), and steam (gas).

    640px-Kochendes_wasser02.jpg

    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): Boiling Water. When liquid water boils to make gaseous water, it undergoes a phase change. Figure used with permission from Wikipedia

    We know from our experience with water that substances can change from one phase to another if the conditions are right. Typically, varying the temperature of a substance (and, less commonly, the pressure exerted on it) can cause a phase change, a physical process in which a substance goes from one phase to another (Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\)). Phase changes have particular names depending on what phases are involved, as summarized in Table \(\PageIndex{1}\).

    Table \(\PageIndex{1}\): Phase Changes
    Change Name
    solid to liquid melting, fusion
    solid to gas sublimation
    liquid to gas boiling, evaporation
    liquid to solid solidification, freezing
    gas to liquid condensation
    gas to solid deposition

    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\) illustrates the relationships between the different ways matter can be classified.

    2fd16f223c1825c17309b0ccbbf18bed.jpg

    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\): The Classification of Matter. Matter can be classified in a variety of ways, depending on its properties.

    Problems

    1. Explain the differences between the physical properties of matter and the chemical properties of matter.

    2. What is the difference between a heterogeneous mixture and a homogeneous mixture? Give an example of each.

    3. Give at least two examples of a phase change and state the phases involved in each.

    Answers

    1. Physical properties describe the existence of matter, and chemical properties describe how substances change into other substances.

    2. A heterogeneous mixture is obviously a mixture, such as dirt; a homogeneous mixture behaves like a single substance, such as saltwater.

    3. solid to liquid (melting) and liquid to gas (boiling) (answers will vary)

    Key Takeaways

    • Matter can be described with both physical properties and chemical properties.
    • Matter can be identified as an element, a compound, or a mixture.

    Contributors and Attributions

    • Anonymous


    1.2: The Classification of Matter is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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