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What is an element?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.1
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1.1.110 cards
What is an element?
A pure substance made of **only one type of atom**; it cannot be broken down chemically.
What is a compound?
**Two or more different atoms chemically bonded** together in a fixed ratio.
What is a mixture?
Two or more substances **physically combined but not chemically bonded**, in any ratio.
How is a compound separated?
Only by **chemical** means (a reaction) — not by physical methods.
How is a mixture separated?
By **physical** means (e.g. filtration, distillation), because nothing is bonded.
Homogeneous vs heterogeneous mixture?
Homogeneous = **uniform** (e.g. solution, air); heterogeneous = **not uniform**, parts visible (e.g. sand + iron).
Element vs compound — key difference?
Element = one type of atom; compound = different atoms **chemically bonded** in a fixed ratio.
What is a pure substance?
A single element or compound — it has a **sharp, fixed** melting and boiling point.
How can melting point test purity?
A pure substance melts **sharply**; impurities **lower** it and spread it over a **range**.
Is brass an element, compound or mixture?
A **mixture** (an alloy of copper and zinc) — the metals are not chemically bonded.
1.1.212 cards
What are the three states of matter?
**Solid**, **liquid** and **gas** — they differ in how close the particles are and how freely they move.
Describe the particles in a solid.
**Packed** close in fixed positions; they only **vibrate**. A solid has a fixed shape and volume.
Describe the particles in a liquid.
**Touching** but not fixed; they **slide** past each other. A liquid has fixed volume but takes the container's shape.
Describe the particles in a gas.
**Far apart**, moving **fast and randomly**. A gas fills its container and is easily compressed.
What is the kinetic molecular theory?
A model treating matter as **small particles in constant random motion**, with attractive forces between them that weaken as they spread apart.
What does temperature measure?
The **average kinetic energy** of the particles — hotter means the particles move faster on average.
How do you convert °C to kelvin?
**Add 273.15** (≈ 273): T(K) = θ(°C) + 273.15.
What is absolute zero?
**0 K** (about −273 °C) — the lowest possible temperature, where particle motion is at a minimum.
Why can a gas be compressed but a liquid cannot?
Gas particles are **far apart** with large gaps to close up; liquid particles are already **touching** with little space.
Why does temperature stay constant during melting?
The added energy is used to **overcome the forces** between particles, not to speed them up, so the average kinetic energy (temperature) stays the same.
Why does a liquid take the shape of its container?
Its particles are **not held in fixed positions**, so they **slide** and flow to fit the container.
What happens to particles when a solid is heated?
They **gain kinetic energy** and **vibrate more**, until they have enough energy to break free of their fixed positions and the solid melts.
1.1.312 cards
Why can mixtures be separated physically?
Their components are **not chemically bonded**, so they keep their own properties and can be separated by **physical** methods.
What does filtration separate, and how?
An **insoluble solid** from a liquid — the solid is too large to pass through the **filter paper** (uses particle size).
What does evaporation / crystallisation separate?
A **dissolved (soluble) solid** from its solution — the **solvent boils off**, leaving the solid behind.
What does distillation separate, and how?
Liquids (or a liquid from a dissolved solid) by their difference in **boiling point**.
What does chromatography separate, and how?
The dissolved components of a mixture by their difference in **solubility / attraction** to the paper.
What is the R_{f} value?
R_{f} = distance moved by **spot** ÷ distance moved by **solvent** — a ratio with **no units**, between 0 and 1.
What does a larger R_{f} tell you?
The component is **more soluble** in the solvent, so it was carried **further** up the paper.
How do you recover an insoluble solid like sand from a mixture with salt?
Add water to dissolve the salt, then **filter** — the sand stays as the residue.
How do you separate iron from a sand/salt mixture?
Use a **magnet** — iron is **magnetic**, sand and salt are not.
Best technique to purify a solid product made in solution?
**Crystallisation** — dissolve in hot solvent, cool to form pure crystals, then filter them off.
Can an R_{f} value be greater than 1?
**No** — the spot cannot move further than the solvent front, so 0 < R_{f} < 1.
Match the property to the technique.
Size → **filtration**; boiling point → **distillation**; solubility → **crystallisation / chromatography**.
Topic 1.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Introduction to the particulate nature of matter
Chemistry exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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