Chemicals are substances with a distinct molecular composition that are produced through a chemical process. They can be found in various forms such as solids, liquids, and gases. Chemicals play a crucial role in our daily lives, from the food we eat to the products we use.
Types of Chemicals
Chemicals can be classified into several categories based on their composition and properties:
Elements: These are substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means. Examples include oxygen, carbon, and hydrogen.
Compounds: These are substances composed of two or more elements that are chemically combined in fixed proportions. Water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) are examples of compounds.
Mixtures: These are combinations of two or more substances that are not chemically combined. Mixtures can be homogeneous (uniform composition) or heterogeneous (non-uniform composition).
Chemical reactions occur when substances undergo a chemical change to form new substances with different properties. The reactants are the substances that undergo the change, while the products are the new substances formed.
The Living Environment: Students understand that cells are the basic unit of life, that all life as we know it has evolved through genetic transfer and natural selection to create a great diversity of organisms, and that these organisms create interdependent webs through which matter and energy flow. Students understand similarities and differences between humans and other organisms and the interconnections of these interdependent webs.
Biodiversity: Students compare living things based on their behaviors, external features, and environmental needs.
Describe how living things can be sorted in many ways, depending on which features or behaviors are used to sort them, and apply this understanding to sort living things.