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MIXTURE
BASICS
Mixtures are usually how you find things in nature. Rocks, the
ocean, just about anything you find. They are substances held
together by PHYSICAL FORCES, not chemical.
When
you see distilled water, it's a pure substance which means that there
are just water molecules in the liquid. A mixture would be a glass of
water with other things dissolved inside, maybe salt. Each of the substances
in that glass of water keeps the original chemical properties. So if
you have some dissolved substances, you can boil off the water and still
have those dissolved substances left over. It will take a higher temperature
to melt the salt.
MIXTURES
ARE EVERYWHERE
There are an infinite amount of mixtures. Anything you can combine
is a mixture. Think of everything you eat. Just think about how
many cakes there are. Each of those cakes is made up of a different
mixture.
Solutions are also mixtures. If you put salt into a glass of
water, it is considered to be a mixture. You can always tell
a mixture because each of the substances can be separated form
the group by different physical ways. You can always get the
salt out of saltwater by boiling the water away.
CONCRETE
AND SALT WATER
Two classic examples of mixtures are concrete and salt water.
You can see them both being made everyday. Concrete is a mixture
of water, sand, and other ground-up rocks and solids. All of
these are mixed together (making a mixture). Workers then pour
the concrete into a mold and the concrete turns into a solid
with the separate pieces inside. Salt water is a little different.
First, it's a liquid. Second, it's an ionic solution, the salt
is broken up into sodium (Na) and chloride (Cl) ions in the water.
Now you might be wondering why concrete and salt water are not
new compounds when they are all mixed together. The special thing
is that the basic parts can still be removed by physical forces.
You can take the solid concrete and grind it up again. The individual
components can then be separated and you can start all over.
Salt water is even easier. All you have to do is boil the water
off and the salt is left over, just like when you started.
The thing to remember about mixtures is that you start with some
pieces, combine them, and then you can do something to pull those
pieces apart again. You wind up with the same molecules (in the
same amounts) that you started with.
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