Matter & Its Properties

Cards (28)

  • Matter has various properties, including being solid, liquid, or gas.
  • Ice is formed by heating and ionizing a gas.
  • Decantation is a process of using gravity to separate two immiscible liquids or a mixture of a solid and a liquid, where the mixture's lighter component is dumped or sucked off the top.
  • Distillation is a physical separation technique based on the vaporization of the different components of the mixture to be separated, typically involving heating, vapors production, separation, and condensation back into a liquid.
  • Paper chromatography is a technique for separating dissolved chemical substances by taking advantage of their different rates of migration across sheets of paper.
  • Height is an intensive property.
  • Chemical reactivity measures how readily a substance undergoes a chemical reaction by itself or by reacting with another substance.
  • Luster is an intensive property.
  • Ability to oxidize is a chemical property.
  • Ability to form rust is a chemical property.
  • Odor is an extensive property.
  • Ductility is an intensive property.
  • Length is an extensive property.
  • Conductivity is an intensive property.
  • Concrete is made up of positively charged particles.
  • Volume is an extensive property.
  • Malleability is an intensive property.
  • Hardness is an extensive property.
  • Density is an extensive property.
  • Melting point is an intensive property.
  • Extensive properties are properties that are measured in terms of volume, length, or area.
  • Separating techniques are the processes of separating or extracting different components of a mixture using some physical methods such as sublimation, evaporation, distillation, filtration or sedimentation, separating funnel, magnetic separation, and paper chromatography.
  • Intensive properties are properties that are measured in terms of mass or density.
  • Weight is an extensive property.
  • Chemical Formula of Common Substances includes Dihydrogen monoxide, Hydrogen peroxide, Carbon tetrahydride, Carbon dioxide, Nitrogen trihydride, Sodium chloride, Calcium carbonate, Glucose, Ethyl alcohol.
  • Boiling point is an intensive property.
  • Temperature is an intensive property.
  • Size is an extensive property.