Data Analysis
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Transcript Data Analysis
Data Analysis
Applying Mathematical
Concepts to Chemistry
Units of Measure
SI Units- scientifically
accepted units of
measure:
The Metric System
Metric Practice
623.19 hL = __________ L
1026 mm = ___________cm
0.025 kg = ___________mg
Online Powers of 10 Demonstration:
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/science
opticsu/powersof10/
Derived Quantities- Volume
Volume- amount of
space an object takes
up.
V = l x w x h (all in
meters)
V= m3
m3 is too large so cm3
are used
1 cm3 = 1 mL by
definition
Temperature Scales
Temperature Conversions
Degrees Celsius to
Kelvin
Tkelvin=Tcelsius + 273
Kelvin to Degrees
Celsius
Tcelsius=Tkelvin - 273
EX: 25 °C = ? K
EX: 210 K = ? °C
Tkelvin=25 +273=298K
Tc= 273–210= -63°C
Scientific Notation
A method of expressing very large or small
numbers in a concise manner
Requires 2 parts:
–
Number between 1 and 9.99999999…
Power of ten
–
EX: 5432.1 meters 5.4321 x 103 meters
–
Factor Labeling (Dimensional
Analysis)
Any number divided by itself is equal to 1
–
–
6/6 = 1
6 meters/6 meters = 1
Any number can be multiplied by one without
changing its value
–
–
5 x (6/6) = 5
5 x (6 meters/6 meters) = 5
Converting Units Through
Dimensional Analysis
Equal units divided by one another are equal
to 1
1m/100 cm = 1 m/cm
100 cm/1m = 1 cm/m
50 cm x (1m/100cm) = 0.5 m
50 m x (100cm/1m) = 5000 cm
Practice Problems
12.5 eggs = ? Dozen
13.69 m = ? cm
13.69 km = ? cm
1.25 x 103 ft = ? yd
Multiple Step Factor Labeling
5.2 x103 yd = ? In
45 mph = ? ft/min
3.1 g/mL = ? Kg/L
Derived Quantities- Density
Density- how much matter is in the volume an object
takes up.
Density = mass/volume
D= g/mL
Determining Density
Mass- measure in grams with balance
Volume–
Regular shaped object: measure sides and use
volume formula
–
EX: rectangle V= l x w x h
Irregular shaped object: water displacement
Density by Water Displacement
Fill graduated cylinder
to known initial volume
Add object
Record final volume
Subtract initial volume
from final volume
Record volume of
object
Graphing Data
How Does Volume Impact Temperature?
General Rules
–
–
–
–
–
Fit page
Even scale
Best fit/trendline
Informative Title
Labeled Axes
Accuracy vs Precision
Accuracy- closeness of
measurements to the
target value
Precision- closeness of
measurements to each
other
Percent Error
%error = (accepted-experimental) x 100
accepted
EX: The measured mass is 5.0g. It was
predicted that the accepted value should
have been 6.0 g.
% error = 6.0g-5.0g x 100 = 16.7%
6.0g
Significant Figures
Measurements are
limited in their
sensitivity by the
instrument used to
measure
Estimating Measurements
Read one place past
the instrument
35.0 mL is saying the
actual measurement is
between
34.9
and 35.1 mL
Why Significant Figures?
Measurements involve rounding
Multiplying/dividing or adding/subtracting
measurements can not make them more
accurate
Provide a way to tell how sensitive a
measurement really is…
5 ≠ 5.0 ≠ 5.00 ≠ 5.000
Recognizing Significant Digits
1. Nonzero digits are always significant
–
2. Zeros between nonzeros are significant
–
543.21 meters has 5 significant figures
505.05 liters has 5 sig figs
3. Zeros to the right of a decimal and a
nonzero are significant
–
3.10 has 3 sig figs
Recognizing Sig Figs
4. Placeholder zeros are not significant
–
–
–
–
0.01g has one sig fig
1000g has one sig fig
1000.g has four sig figs
1000.0g has five sig figs
5. Counting numbers and constants have
infinite significant figures
–
5 people has infinite sig figs
Practice Identifying Sig Figs
A) Clearly circle the significant digits in each of the
following numbers:
0.540 30 m
46.93 L
0.004 79 g
56.00 s
B) Rewrite each of the following numbers to the
number of significant digits which is specified in the
parenthesis:
0.012 70 (2)
2,190,050 L (2)
0.005 23 g (1)
3.079 s (2)
Rule for Multiplying/Dividing Sig
Figs
Multiply as usual in calculator
Write answer
Round answer to same number of sig figs as
the lowest original operator
EX: 1000 x 123.456 = 123456 = 100000
EX: 1000. x 123.456 = 123456 = 123500
Practice Multiplying/Dividing
50.20 x 1.500
0.412 x 230
1.2x108 / 2.4 x 10-7
50400 / 61321
Rule for Adding/Subtracting
Only place values where all measurements
being added/subtracted have sig figs are
utilized
EX: 1002
+ 1.2345
1003
Practice Adding/Subtracting
100.23 + 56.1
.000954 + 5.0542
1.2 x 104 – 5.02 x 103
1.0045 + 0.0250