I'm thinking of an object you might have at home. Can you guess it?
I can hold it in one hand.
It's yellow.
Its juice is acidic.
Did you guess it?
It's a lemon!
You might not realize it, but you used some of the lemon's physical and chemical properties to identify it.
Learn a little more about these key properties of materials to help you succeed in science class.
Physical Properties of Materials
A physical property of an object can be seen or measured without changing the object's identity.
Some examples are:
Length
Density
Mass
Temperature
Luster (shine)
Returning to our lemon example, we could measure the length of the lemon at 7.5 cm without changing anything about the lemon itself.
To get more specific, physical properties are divided into two groups: intensive and extensive.
Intensive and Extensive Properties of Materials
Intensive Properties
Don't depend on the size of the sample.
Examples:
Temperature
Density
Color
Odor/smell
Extensive Properties
Do depend on the size of the sample.
Examples:
Size
Length
Volume
Mass (weight)
Whether we have a whole lemon or a small wedge, it will still smell like lemon. The smell is an intensive property because it's the same whether the piece of lemon is big or small.
A wedge of lemon weighs less than a whole lemon does. This extensive property changes when the samples are of different sizes.
Chemical Properties of Materials
When you observe or test an object's chemical properties, the molecules that make up the object change.
Some examples of chemical properties include:
Being acidic or basic
Flammability
Reactivity at room temperature — whether it will react with water or air at typical temperatures
Oxidation — the ability to react with oxygen
Our lemon can oxidize. If we leave it on the counter for days, it will react with oxygen and turn brown.
Quiz
Which of these is a chemical property?
Physical Changes
When you're trying to understand the chemical and physical properties of materials, discussing the changes to those properties can be helpful.
When you make a physical change to an object, its chemical composition stays the same, but something about its size or appearance changes.
Some physical changes we could make to our lemon are:
Color — paint it blue 🎨
Size — chop it in half 🔪
Temperature — cool it in the refrigerator 🌡️
The lemon is still a lemon after all these changes. It hasn't become something new. That's how we know the properties we changed are physical, not chemical.
Chemical Changes
Chemical changes result in new substances. Chemical properties of materials are affected by chemical changes. If you're trying to identify a chemical property of an object, it might be easier to think about how changing the property would affect the material.
Some chemical changes we could make to the lemon are:
Burning — lighting it on fire produces ash, water, and carbon dioxide.
Oxidation — letting the lemons react with air to become soft and brown.
Fermenting — making preserved lemons, similar to pickling.
Chemical changes can't often be reversed. New substances have formed from the original lemon.
Summary
We've made a lot of changes to our lemon!
Let's review:
Physical Properties
Observed without changing the material
Can be intensive (don't depend on sample size) or extensive (depend on sample size)
Include size, mass, density, temperature
Chemical Properties
Testing them changes the chemical makeup of the object
Aren't easily reversed
Include flammability, oxidation, reaction with acid or base
Check Your Understanding
Devon is trying to figure out the physical and chemical properties of a wooden log they found in their shed by doing different tests. Could you identify the chemical properties that Devon tested? How they tried each is noted in parentheses.
Quiz
Identify the chemical properties:
Take Action
Now, that's a chemical change for ya!
Apply what you learned about physical and chemical properties of materials:
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