IB Chemistry 1.1 Particulate Nature 1.1.1
1.1.1

Elements, Compounds & Mixtures

Pure Substances

Matter with constant composition and distinct properties.

  • Elements: Cannot be broken down chemically. Made of one type of atom (e.g., \(Au, O_2\)).
  • Compounds: Two or more elements chemically bonded in fixed ratio. Properties differ from constituents (e.g., \(H_2O, NaCl\)). Separation requires chemical reaction.

Mixtures

Two or more substances physically mixed. Retain original properties.

  • Homogeneous: Uniform composition. One phase. "Solutions" (e.g., Saltwater, Air, Brass).
  • Heterogeneous: Non-uniform. Distinct phases (e.g., Salad Dressing, Concrete).

Separation Techniques

Mixtures are separated by physical means. Differences in properties determine the method.

1. Filtration

Insoluble Solid from Liquid

Based on particle size. (e.g. Sand from Water).

2. Evaporation

Soluble Solid from Liquid

Boils off solvent to leave solid. (e.g. Salt from Brine).

3. Solvation

Solubility Difference

Dissolve one component while leaving other insoluble. (e.g. Salt & Sand mixture → Add water).

4. Recrystallization

Purification Technique

Dissolve impure solid in hot solvent. Cool slowly. Pure crystals form, leaving impurities in solution.

5. Chromatography

Affinity for Stationary vs Mobile Phase

Formula: \( R_f = \frac{\text{dist. spot}}{\text{dist. solvent}} \)

6. Distillation (Simple & Fractional)

Boiling Point Differences

Simple: Keep the solvent (e.g., pure water from seawater).

Fractional: Separate liquids with close B.P.s (e.g., Crude Oil). Uses fractionating column for repeated condensation/evaporation cycles.

← Back to 1.1 1.1.2 Kinetic Molecular Theory →