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highschool/Grade 9/Science/SNC1DZ/Study_Sheet.md
2019-03-01 09:17:37 -05:00

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Unit 1

Unit 2

Physical Properties

  • A characeristic of a substance that can be determined without changing the composition (“make-up”) of that substance
  • Characteristics can be determinded using your 5 senses and measuring instruments
    • smell, taste, touch, hearing, sight
    • scales, tape, measuring meter

Qualitative and Quantitative Properties

Type Definition Example
Quantitative Property A property that IS measured and has a numerical value Ex. Temperature, height, mass, density
Qualitative Property A property that is NOT measured and has no numerical value Ex. Colour, odor, texture

Quantitative physical Properties

  • Density: amount of stuff (or mass) per unit volume (g/cm3)
  • Freezing Point: point where water solidifies (0oC)
  • Melting Point: point where water liquefies (0oC)
  • Boiling Point: point where liquid phase becomes gaseous (100oC)

Common Qualitative Physical Properties

Type Definition Example
Lustre Shininess of dullness
Referred to as high or low lustre depending on the shininess
Clarity The ability to allow light through Transparent (Glass)
Translucent (Frosted Glass)
Opaque (Brick)
Brittleness Breakability or flexibility
Glass would be considered as brittle whereas slime/clay are flexible
Viscosity The ability of a liquid or gas to resist flow or not pour readily through
Refer to as more or less viscous
Molasses is more viscous, water is less (gases tend to get”thicker as heated; liquids get runnier)
Hardness The relative ability to scratch or be scratched by another substance
Referred to as high or low level of hardness
Can use a scale (1 is wax, 10 is diamond)
Malleability the ability of a substance to be hammered into a thinner sheet or molded Silver is malleable
Play dough/pizza dough is less
glass is not malleable
Ductility the ability of a substance to be pulled into a finer strand Pieces of copper can be drawn into thin wires, ductile
Electrical Conductivity The ability of a substance to allow electric current to pass through it
Refer to as high and low conductivity
Copper wires have high conductivity
Plastic has no conductivity
Form: Crystalline Solid Have their particles arranged in an orderly geometric pattern Salt and Diamonods
Form: Amorphous Solid Have their particles randomly distributed without any long-range-pattern Plastic, Glass, Charcoal

Chemical Property

A characteristic (property) of a substance that describes its ability to undergo changes to its composition to produce one of more new substances. AKA BEHAVIOUR. Everything has one! Cannot be determined by physical properties

E.g. ability of nails /cars to rust Firewors are explosive

Denim is resistant to soap, but is combustible

Baking soda reacts with vinegar and cake ingredients to rise

Bacterial cultures convert milk to cheese, grapes to wine, cocoa to chocolate

CLR used to clean kettles, showerheads because it breaks down minerals

Silver cleaner for tarnished jewellery, dishes because silver reacts with air to turn black