general and inorganic chemistry prof. maurizio paci email: [email protected]@uniroma2.it phone:...

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General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: [email protected] Phone: 0672594446

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Page 1: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

General and Inorganic Chemistry

Prof. Maurizio Paci

Email: [email protected]

Phone: 0672594446

Page 2: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Chemistry and MatterChemistry

“The study of properties of materials and of changes that materials undergo”

Matter

“It’s the physical material of universe; anything that occupies space and has mass”

Matter can exist in three physical states (aggregation states):

1. Gas o vapor

2. Liquid

3. Solid

Page 3: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Introduction to Matter

Gas

No fixed volume or shape; it conforms to the volume and shape of its container. Gases can be compressed or expanded to occupy different volumes

Liquid

A liquid has a fixed volume, independent of its container, but it has no specific shape. It assumes the shape of the container it is in. Liquids cannot be appreciably compressed

Solid

A solid has its own defined volume and shape. Solids cannot be appreciably compressed

Page 4: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Introduction to Matter

Substance

A pure substance has a fixed composition and distinct properties. Most matter we come in contact with in daily life is not a pure substance but a mixture of different substances

Physical and Chemical Properties

Every pure substance has a unique set of defined properties : characteristics which allow us to distinguish it from other substances. These properties fall into two general categories: physical and chemical. Changes can be macroscopic or microscopic

Chemical Properties – properties that we can measure without changing the basic identity (the composition)

Chemical Properties – describe the way a substance can change or react to form other substances

Page 5: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Introduction to Matter

Physical and Chemical Changes

Substances can undergo several changes in properties; these changes can be classified as either chemical or physical

Physical changes– changing the physical appearance but not the basic identity. All changes of state (e.g. solid, liqid or gas) are physical changes

Chemical changes– also known as chemical reactions. Changing the basic identity: the substance is tranformed into different chemically substances .

Page 6: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Introduction to Matter

Mixtures

Mixtures refer to combination of two or more pure substances in which each substance retain its own chemical identity and hence its own properties

Heterogeneous mixtures are not uniform throughout the sample and have regions of different appareance and properties

Homogeneous mixtures are uniform throughout the sample, however the individual substances retain their individual chemical and physical nature. Homogeneous mixtures are also called solutions. The most common type is descrbed by a solid (the solute) that is dissolved in a liquid (the solvent)

An important characteristic of homogeneous mixtures is that individual components retain their chemical and physical properties. Thus, it’s possible to separate the substances based on their different physical properties For example, we can separate water from ethanol using heir different boiling temperatures in a process known as distillation.

Page 7: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Elements and compounds

Pure substances have an invariable composition and are composed by either elements or compounds

Elements

Substances that cannot be decomposed into simpler substances by chemical means

Compounds

Can be decomposed into two or more elements, by which that substance is constituetd.

Page 8: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Elements and compounds

Page 9: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Elements and compounds

Elements

Elements are the basic substances out of which all matter is composed

• Everything in the worls is made up of only 109 different elements

• 90% of the human body is composed by only three elements: Oxygen, Carbon and Hydrogen

Elements are known by a common name as well as their abbreviation.

Page 10: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Element Abbreviation

Carbon C

Fluorine F

Hydrogen H

Iodine I

Nitrogen N

Oxygen O

Phosphorus P

Sulfur S

Aluminum Al

Barium Ba

Calcium Ca

Chlorine Cl

Helium He

Magnesium Mg

Platinum Pt

Silicon Si

Copper Cu (from cuprum)

Iron Fe (from ferrum)

Lead Pb (from plumbum)

Mercury Hg (from hydrargyrum)

Potassium K (from kalium)

Silver Ag (from argentum)

Sodium Na (from natrium)

Tin Sn (from stannum)

Page 11: General and Inorganic Chemistry Prof. Maurizio Paci Email: paci@uniroma2.itpaci@uniroma2.it Phone: 0672594446

Elements and compounds

Compounds

Compounds are substances composed by two or more elements. In a compound the constituting elements are chemically united and are combined in a definite proportion by mass.

The observation that the elemental composition of a pure compound is always the same is known as the law of constant composition ( or the law of definite proportions).

For example, pure water is composed by two elements, Oxygen and Hydrogen, at the defined ratio of 11% Hydrogen and 89% Oxygen. In one kg of water we find 110 g of H and 890 g of O. In 20 g of water there are 2.2 g of H and 17.8 g of O