2.3.7

Conservation of Mass

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The Conservation of Mass

In a chemical reaction or a change of state, the total mass does not change. This is always the case. We call it 'The Conservation of Mass'.

Change of state

Change of state

  • A change of state is when a substance is heated or cooled, which causes the particles to move faster or slower and take a different arrangement in space.
  • When a substance changes state the number of particles stays the same.
    • If you count the particles at the end and at the beginning, then the number is exactly the same.
  • This is because nothing has happened to them apart from moving in a different way.
Example - masses on a balance

Example - masses on a balance

  • If you have some blocks on a balance they will have a certain mass. If you re-stack them in a different way, then will the mass change?
  • No, the order doesn’t matter. The left-hand side is 5kg, and so is the right-hand side.
  • The same can be said for rearranging particles in a change of state.
Example - ice

Example - ice

  • Look at the diagram for ice melting, each circle represents a water particle.
  • The number of particles are the same at the start and at the end.
    • Therefore the mass will not change.
  • If each particle here has a mass of 1kg on a balance, then the ice would have a mass of 15kg and the liquid water would have a mass of 15kg. The mass is conserved.
  • This is true for all changes of state: the mass is conserved for them all as particles are not created or destroyed.
Chemical reactions

Chemical reactions

  • In a chemical reaction, the atoms rearrange and join together in different ways.
  • As the same number of each type of atom is there at the end as there was at the start, then the mass doesn’t change.
  • You can think of this as rearranging blocks on a scale again.
  • If we think about the total number of each atom, we can see it stays the same.
  • So the mass will also stay the same – it is conserved.
  • This is true for any chemical reaction because atoms cannot be created or destroyed.
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Biology

1.1

Cells, Tissues & Organs

1.2

Reproduction & Variation

1.3

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1.4

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1.5

Plants & Photosynthesis

1.6

Biological Systems & Processes

2

Chemistry

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Particles

2.2

Chemical Reactions

2.3

Atoms, Elements, Compounds

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The Periodic Table

2.5

Materials & the Earth

2.6

Reactivity

2.7

Energetics

2.8

Properties of Materials

3

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3.2

Forces & Motion

3.3

Waves

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Electricity & Magnetism

3.5

Matter

3.6

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Disciplinary Knowledge

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