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Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

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Physical Change Physical change is a change in size, shape, or a state of matter. The identity remains the same 1. When a substance freezes, boils, evaporates, or condenses, it undergoes physical changes. 2. Changes might involve energy changes, but no identity changes. 3. Color changes may occur too.

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Page 1: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Chapter 15Section 2

By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Page 2: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Physical Properties• Any characteristic of a material that you can observe without changing the

identity of the substances that make up the material• Appearance-to list the appearances you can list the shape, color, state of

matter, etc. • Behavior-this can include attraction to magnets, ability to be drawn out

into wires, etc. • Using Physical Properties to Separate 1. You can sift out different particles by difference in shape 2. Iron filings can be separated from sand by using a magnet.

Page 3: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Physical Change • Physical change is a change in size, shape, or a state of matter.• The identity remains the same 1. When a substance freezes, boils, evaporates, or condenses, it undergoes physical changes. 2. Changes might involve energy changes, but no identity changes. 3. Color changes may occur too.

Page 4: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Physical Changes (continued)• Using physical changes to separate 1. Evaporating salt water will leave the salt behind• Distillation- the process for separating substances in a mixture by

evaporating a liquid and re-condensing its vapor. 1. It is usually done in a laboratory 2. Used in factories

Page 5: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Chemical properties• Chemical property- A characteristic of a substance that indicates whether

it can undergo a certain chemical change

Page 6: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Detecting Chemical Change• Identity changes 1. Chemical change- a change from one substance to another 2. Rapid release of energy detected as heat, light, and sound 3. Clues such as change in temperature or the formation of bubbles in a liquid are helpful indicators that a reaction is taking place.• Using chemical change to separate 1. Cleaning tarnished silver 2. This type of change is usually used in factories, not at home

Page 7: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

Weathering- Chemical or Physical Change

• Physical 1. Rocks split when water seeps into a small crack and freezes 2. The smaller pieces of the rock still have the same properties as before.• Chemical 1. Solid calcium carbonate, a compound found in limestone, reacts when when water is slightly acidic. 2. It changes into a new substance, making it a chemical change.

Page 8: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

The Law of Conservation of Mass• Matter is neither created nor destroyed during a chemical change.• The mass of all substances that are present before a chemical change

equals the mass of all the substances that remain after the change.

Page 9: Chapter 15 Section 2 By: Kat, Cailyn, Madison, Alyssa, Eric (Stacy), Douglas, Shane

http://youtu.be/M8tyjwB42X4

^^^physical vs. chemical changes video^^^