Read the descriptions below of two substances and an experiment on each. Decide whether the result of the experiment tells you the substance is a pure substance or a mixture, if you can. • Sample A is 100. g of a coarse grey powder with a faint unpleasant smell. 15. mg of the powder are put into a very thin tube and heated. The powder begins melting at 66.2 °C. The temperature continues to rise as the powder slowly melts, and the last of the powder becomes liquid at 76.0 °C. • Sample B is a solid yellow cube with a total mass of 50.0 g. The cube is put into a beaker filled with 250. mL of water. The cube collapses into a small pile of orange powder at the bottom of the beaker. When this powder is filtered out, dried and weighed, it has a total mass of 29.9 g. If the experiment is repeated with 500. mL of water, the powder that's left over has a mass of 30.0 g. Is sample A made from a pure substance or a mixture? If the description of the substance and the outcome of the experiment isn't enough to decide, choose "can't decide." Is sample B made from a pure substance or a mixture? If the description of the substance and the outcome of the experiment isn't enough to decide, choose "can't decide." pure substance O mixture O (can't decide) O pure substance O mixture O (can't decide) X

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Author:Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
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Chapter1: Chemical Foundations
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Read the descriptions below of two substances and an experiment on each. Decide whether the result of the experiment tells you the substance is a
pure substance or a mixture, if you can.
• Sample A is 100. g of a coarse grey powder with a faint unpleasant smell. 15. mg of the powder are put into a very thin tube and heated. The
powder begins melting at 66.2 °C. The temperature continues to rise as the powder slowly melts, and the last of the powder becomes liquid at
76.0 °C.
Sample B is a solid yellow cube with a total mass of 50.0 g. The cube is put into a beaker filled with 250. mL of water. The cube collapses into
a small pile of orange powder at the bottom of the beaker. When this powder is filtered out, dried and weighed, it has a total mass of 29.9 g. If
the experiment is repeated with 500. mL of water, the powder that's left over has a mass of 30.0 g.
Is sample A made from a pure substance or a mixture?
If the description of the substance and the outcome of
the experiment isn't enough to decide, choose "can't
decide."
Is sample B made from a pure substance or a mixture?
If the description of the substance and the outcome of
the experiment isn't enough to decide, choose "can't
decide."
Opure substance
mixture
(can't decide)
pure substance
mixture
(can't decide)
Transcribed Image Text:Read the descriptions below of two substances and an experiment on each. Decide whether the result of the experiment tells you the substance is a pure substance or a mixture, if you can. • Sample A is 100. g of a coarse grey powder with a faint unpleasant smell. 15. mg of the powder are put into a very thin tube and heated. The powder begins melting at 66.2 °C. The temperature continues to rise as the powder slowly melts, and the last of the powder becomes liquid at 76.0 °C. Sample B is a solid yellow cube with a total mass of 50.0 g. The cube is put into a beaker filled with 250. mL of water. The cube collapses into a small pile of orange powder at the bottom of the beaker. When this powder is filtered out, dried and weighed, it has a total mass of 29.9 g. If the experiment is repeated with 500. mL of water, the powder that's left over has a mass of 30.0 g. Is sample A made from a pure substance or a mixture? If the description of the substance and the outcome of the experiment isn't enough to decide, choose "can't decide." Is sample B made from a pure substance or a mixture? If the description of the substance and the outcome of the experiment isn't enough to decide, choose "can't decide." Opure substance mixture (can't decide) pure substance mixture (can't decide)
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