SC15.8.5
Observe and analyze characteristic properties of substances (e.g., odor, density, solubility, flammability, melting point, boiling point) before and after the substances combine to determine if a chemical reaction has occurred.
Observe and analyze characteristic properties of substances (e.g., odor, density, solubility, flammability, melting point, boiling point) before and after the substances combine to determine if a chemical reaction has occurred.
Unpacked Content
UP:SC15.8.5
Vocabulary
- Characteristic properties (e.g., odor, density, solubility, flammability, melting point, boiling point)
- Substances
- Chemical reaction
Knowledge
- Each pure substance has characteristic physical and chemical properties that can be used to identify it.
- Characteristic properties of substances may include odor, density, solubility, flammability, melting point, and boiling point.
- Chemical reactions change characteristic properties of substances.
- Substances react chemically in characteristic ways.
- In a chemical process, the atoms that make up the original substances are regrouped into different molecules, and these new substances have different properties from those of the reactants.
Skills
- Observe characteristic physical and chemical properties of pure substances before and after they interact.
- Analyze characteristic physical and chemical properties of pure substances before and after they interact.
- Analyze the properties to identify patterns (i.e., similarities and differences), including the changes in physical and chemical properties of each substance before and after the interaction.
- Use the analysis to determine whether a chemical reaction has occurred.
Understanding
- Observations and analyses can be used to determine whether a chemical reaction has occurred.
- The change in properties of substances is related to the rearrangement of atoms in the reactants and products in a chemical reaction (e.g., when a reaction has occurred, atoms from the substances present before the interaction must have been rearranged into new configurations, resulting in the properties of new substances).