Matter Transformation and Atomic Structure

Matter Transformation

Physical Process: A transformation where matter retains its composition, structure, and properties. For example, changes in state (solid, liquid, gas).

Chemical Process: A transformation where matter changes its composition, structure, and properties. The resulting substances are different from the initial ones. For example, burning wood.

Mixtures

A mixture is the combination of several pure substances that retain their original properties.

Heterogeneous Mixture: Does not have

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Natural Resources, Manufacturing & Environmental Management

Item 11: Natural Resources and Manufacturing

Natural Resources

Water, air, minerals, rocks, oil, natural gas, timber, and agricultural products are examples of natural resources.

Manufacturing

Key processes involve acids and bases under specific conditions (durable, accessible, abundant).

Classification of Resources

Resources are classified based on their durability:

  • Inexhaustible: Air (separation of components by distillation, nitrate combination, electrical discharges, ozone), Water (desalination, potable
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Alkali, Alkaline Earth, Earthy & Carbonoide Elements

Alkali Metals

The alkali metals, Lithium, Sodium, Potassium, Rubidium, Cesium, and Francium, are in Group 1 of the periodic table. They are named for the alkalinity of their compounds. Due to their chemical activity, they are not found in a free state and comprise almost 5% of the Earth’s crust (especially Sodium and Potassium).

Properties

  • Electronic configuration: ns1
  • Low first ionization energy
  • Low electronegativity, decreasing down the group
  • Common oxidation state: +1
  • Form ionic compounds
  • Low melting
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Chemical Reactions, Equilibria, and Industrial Processes

Hess’s Law

If a reaction can be performed in several steps, whether real or theoretical, the total enthalpy change is equal to the sum of the enthalpy changes of these intermediate reactions.

Standard Enthalpy of Reaction

From standard enthalpies of formation.

From bond enthalpies.

Standard Entropy of Reaction

Free Energy

Spontaneous

Theories of Chemical Reactions

Collision Theory

For a chemical reaction to occur, reactants (atoms, molecules, or ions) must collide. Effective collisions require:

  • Sufficient
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Atomic Structure and Chemical Reactions

Atomic Structure

Dalton’s Atomic Theory and Its Demise

Dalton’s atomic theory proposed that matter consists of indivisible particles called atoms. However, the discovery of the electron, a subatomic particle, challenged this theory.

Cathode Rays and the Electron

Cathode rays exhibit specific properties:

  • They travel in a straight line from the cathode to the anode, producing fluorescence upon hitting the tube walls.
  • They behave like a negatively charged electric current, deflecting towards the positive
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Polymer Chemistry, Ceramics, and Composite Materials

Polymer Chemistry

For obtaining a polymer in polymer chemistry, hundreds of thousands of molecules (monomers) are chemically bound. Homopolymers are obtained if the polymer chain is formed by the union of identical monomers. If the polymer chain is formed by the union of different monomers, copolymers are obtained.

Polycondensation: The chain growth occurs by chemical reaction between two functional groups, in most cases with the loss of a small molecule, such as water or hydrochloric acid.

Polyaddition:

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