Chemical Elements, Compounds & Mixtures (DP IB Chemistry)

Revision Note

Stewart Hird

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Elements, Compounds & Mixtures

  • Elements are substances made from one kind of atom

  • Compounds are made from two or more elements chemically combined

  • Elements take part in chemical reactions in which new substances are made in processes that most often involve an energy change

  • In these reactions, atoms combine together in fixed ratios that will give them full outer shells of electrons, producing compounds

  • The properties of compounds can be quite different from the elements that form them

Elements into compounds diagram

1-1-1-elements-into-compounds

The properties of sodium chloride are quite different from sodium and chlorine

  • In a mixture, elements and compounds are interspersed with each other, but are not chemically combined

  • This means the components of a mixture retain the same characteristic properties as when they are in their pure form

  • So, for example, the gases nitrogen and oxygen when mixed in air, retain the same characteristic properties as they would have if they were separate

  • Substances will burn in air because the oxygen present in the air supports combustion

Mixtures at the molecular level diagram

mixtures-molecular-level

Particle in boxes diagrams such as these can help you to visualise the difference between elements and compounds at the molecular level

Homogeneous or hetergeneous

  • homogeneous mixture has uniform composition and properties throughout

  • heterogeneous mixture has non-uniform composition, so its properties are not the same throughout

  • It is often possible to see the separate components in a heterogeneous mixture, but not in a homogeneous mixture

Types of Mixtures

Mixture

Homogeneous or Heterogeneous

Air

Homogeneous

Bronze (an alloy)

Homogeneous

Concrete

Heterogeneous

Orange juice with pulp

Heterogeneous

Separating Mixtures

  • The components retain their individual properties in a mixture and we can often separate them relatively easily. The technique we choose to achieve this will take advantage of a suitable difference in the physical properties of the components

Some mixtures and examples of separation techniques

Mixture

What technique can be used to separate the components?

The property that is different in the components

Air

(Fractional) distillation

Boiling point

Salt & sand

Filtration

Solubility in water

Pigments in food colours

Chromatography

Adsorption on cellulose

A iron-sulfur mixture

A magnet

Magnetism

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Stewart Hird

Author: Stewart Hird

Expertise: Chemistry Lead

Stewart has been an enthusiastic GCSE, IGCSE, A Level and IB teacher for more than 30 years in the UK as well as overseas, and has also been an examiner for IB and A Level. As a long-standing Head of Science, Stewart brings a wealth of experience to creating Topic Questions and revision materials for Save My Exams. Stewart specialises in Chemistry, but has also taught Physics and Environmental Systems and Societies.