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Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry

Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

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Page 1: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Chapter 1Chemical Foundations

AP Chemistry

Page 2: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Objectives

• Recall units of measure

• Describe uncertainty in measurement

• Use scientific notation for numbers

• Apply significant figure rules

Page 3: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Units of Measure

• SI Base Units

– Mass

• Kilogram – kg

• 1 kilogram is about 2.20 pounds

– Length

• Meter – m

• 1 meter is about 3 feet

Page 4: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Units of Measure

• Time– Second – s– The time needed for a cesium-133 atom to

perform 9,192,631,770 complete oscillations. • Temperature

– Kelvin – K– 273 K = 0 degrees C

• Amount – Mole – mol– 1 mol = 6.022x1023 particles

Page 5: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Units of Measure

• Current

– Ampre – A

• Luminous Capacity

– Candela – cd

• First five are the most commonly used in chemistry

Page 6: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Volume

• Volume is not an SI Base Unit– Metric system– Powers of 10

• 1 Liter is 1/1000 of a cubic meter

• 1 Liter (L) = 1000 cm3 = 1000 mL

Page 7: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Cubic Meter

Liter

Milliliter

Page 8: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Volume?

• Uncertainty is in the last digit.

Page 9: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Accuracy and Precision

• Accuracy– The nearness of a measurement to its

accepted value

• Precision– The agreement between numerical values – You can be precise without being accurate

Page 10: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Accurate & Precise

NeitherPrecise

• Loss of accuracy due to systematic errors– Error in same direction every time

• Random Error give erratic results– Poor technique

Page 11: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• All known digits plus one estimated digit in a measurement

Page 12: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

What is the length?

• 2 Sig. Fig• 1 Known Digit• 1 Estimated Digit

Page 13: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• Rule #1

– All Nonzero digits are significant

– Ex. 76.44 mL

– Ex. 285.85 s

Page 14: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• Rule #2

• “Captive Zeros”

• Zeros appearing between nonzero digits are significant

• Ex. 308.2001 g =

Page 15: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• Rule #3

• “Leading Zeros”

• Zeros appearing in front of nonzero digits are not significant

• Ex. 0.007036 g

• Takes care of unit changes

Page 16: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• Rule #4• “Ending Zeros”• Ending zeros are significant if there is a

decimal place• Ex. 53.00 m• Ex. 40000. m• Ex. 40000 m• 40000. is much more precise than 40000

Page 17: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

What is the length?

Page 18: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• Rule #5

• “Exact Numbers”

• Exact number have an unlimited number of significant figures

• Exact numbers are counting numbers or definitions

• 2 cars or 1000g/1kg

Page 19: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Significant Figures

• Rule #6

• “Scientific Notation”

• All numbers that come before the x10n are significant– Must be in proper form

• Ex. 3.33x105

• Ex. 2.04x10-4

Page 20: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Rounding

• 5 and larger round up

• 4 and smaller round down

• Round the following

• 34.567 to 2 SF =

• 756.44 to 4 SF =

• 0.004325 to 3 SF =

• 3436543 to 2 SF =

Page 21: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Addition and Subtraction w/ SF

• Addition and Subtraction

– The answer must have the same number of digits to the right of the decimal as there are in the measurement having the fewest digits to the right of the decimal point

– Ex. 12.11 m + 15 m =

– Number of SF’s does not matter!

Page 22: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Multiplication and Division w/ SF

• Multiplication and Division

– The answer can have no more SF’s than are in the measurement with the fewest total SF’s

– Ex. 55 m / 11.34 s =

Page 23: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Scientific Notation

• A method of representing very large or very small numbers

• M x 10n

– M is a number 1 or larger and less than 10

– n is an integer (positive or negative)

– All digits in M are significant (If in proper form)

Page 24: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Converting to Sci. Notation

• Move decimal so that M is between 1 and 10

• Determine n by counting the number of places the decimal point was moved

– Moved to the left, n is positive

– Moved to the right, n is negative

Page 25: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Examples

• 340,000,000 =

• 5.04x105 =

• 0.00000300 =

• 2.212x10-4 =

Page 26: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Sci. Notation on Calculators

• Enter digits in you calculator using the EE key.

• For TI 83’s it is the 2nd of the comma• For TI 30’s it is a key• Saves key strokes• Fewer OOR mistakes• 3.4x106 = 3.4E6 • 7.4x10-5 = 7.4E-5

Page 27: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Sci. Notatation Math Operations

• Multiply and Divide – Multiply or divide first number– Add exponents (Multiply)– Subtract exponents (Divide)

• Addition and Subtraction– Exponents must be the same– Then add or subtract first number– Exponents stay the same

Page 28: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Calculations

• 3.0x105 + 4.0x105 =

• 4.0x103 – 2.0x102 =

• 7.0x105 * 2.0x104 =

• 8.0x106 / 4.0x10-3 =

• _____4.5x104____ =

6.2x106 * 3.1x10-8

Page 29: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Objectives

• Recall metric prefixes

• Convert numbers from one unit to another

• Describe different temperature scales

• Explain density and perform calculations

• Classify matter into groups

Page 30: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

The Metric System

• A system based on powers of ten

• Uses SI Units

• Allows easy work with both large and small numbers

• Prefixes tell us which power of 10 we are using

Page 31: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

SI Prefixes (10x larger)Page 9 in your book

• Tera• Giga• Mega• Kilo• Hecto• Deca• Base

1012

109

106

103

102

101

100

1000000000000

1000000000

1000000

1000

100

10

1

T

G

M

k

h

da

Page 32: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

SI Prefixes (10x smaller)

• Base• Deci• Centi• Milli• Micro• Nano• Pico•

100

10-1

10-2

10-3

10-6

10-9

10-12

1

.1

.01

.001

.000001

.000000001

.000000000001

d

c

m

μ

n

p

Page 33: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Conversions

• To convert between units set up conversion factors

– Ratios of equality

m

mm

1

1000

km

mx

1

101 3

Page 34: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Convert 67 kg to g

Page 35: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Convert 450 cL to dL

Page 36: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Convert 3.4x108 ng to kg

Page 37: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Converting From Metric To English

• Find ratios that are true

– Page 18 has some equivalents

in

cm

1

54.2

m

in

1

4.39

Page 38: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Convert 763 cm to yd

Page 39: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Convert 1.2 mi/hr to ft/s

Page 40: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Convert 3.8 m2/hr to cm2/s

Page 41: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Temperature

• Many different temp. scales

• All 0 marks based on different ideas

• 0 ºF Coldest saltwater stays a liquid

• 0 ºC Normal Freezing Point of water

• 0 K Molecular motion stops1 K = 1 ºC = 1.8 ºF

Page 42: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers
Page 43: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Temperature Conversion

• Temp K = 273 + Temp C• Temp C = Temp K – 273

• 0 ºC = 273 K

• If you need any others look up the equ.• TC= (TF – 32)(5/9)• TF = TC(9/5) + 32

Page 44: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Density

• Ratio of mass to volume

• Density = __Mass__

Volume

• Periodic Trend

• Units – Solids – g/cm3

– Liquids – g/mL– Gases – g/L

Page 45: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Density Determination• Mass is determined on a balance

• Volume is measured in two ways– Regular objects can be measured– All objects can use water displacement

Page 46: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Density

• Physical Property– Can be used to identify a substance

Lead 11.35 Iron 7.87

Magnesium 1.74 Zinc 7.13

Copper 8.96

Page 47: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Example: A metal cube has sides measuring 3.00 cm. It has a mass of 242.13g. What is the density?

What is the metal?

Page 48: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Density

• Physical Property– Can be used to identify a substance

Lead 11.35 Iron 7.87

Magnesium 1.74 Zinc 7.13

Copper 8.96

Page 49: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers
Page 50: Chapter 1 Chemical Foundations AP Chemistry. Objectives Recall units of measure Describe uncertainty in measurement Use scientific notation for numbers

Homework

• p.33 #'s 33a-f,36a-d,42 47,57,68