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Grade 9: Science
Chapters

1Genetic Information Transfer and Societal Impact

2Cellular Reproduction: Mitosis and Meiosis

3Sexual and Asexual Reproduction in Organisms

4Human Reproduction and Reproductive Technologies

5Physical and Chemical Properties of Substances

6Historical Models of Atomic Structure

7Classification of Pure Substances

Elements and Compounds DefinedHistorical Development of the Periodic TablePeriodic Trends and PatternsModern Periodic Table LayoutChemical Reactions of ElementsApplications of the Periodic TableElement Discovery and ClassificationPeriodic Table in EducationFuture Discoveries in Element ResearchCultural Significance of Elements

8Characteristics of Electricity

9Voltage, Current, and Resistance in Circuits

10Energy Devices and Efficiency

11Electricity Production and Distribution

12Motion and Characteristics of Astronomical Bodies

Courses/ Grade 9: Science /Classification of Pure Substances

Classification of Pure Substances

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Understand the classification of pure substances and the development and nature of the Periodic Table.

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Elements and Compounds Defined

Elements and Compounds Defined: Classification of Pure Substances
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Elements and Compounds Defined: Classification of Pure Substances

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Elements and Compounds Defined — Grade 9 Science

This is the moment where the idea of tiny particles stops being mysterious and starts behaving like LEGO: simple pieces, huge possibilities.


Hook: Remember the atom stories you just studied?

You learned how scientists built the modern atom model from experiments and ideas. Now let's use that model: atoms are real, measurable units with protons, neutrons and electrons. That puts us in the perfect place to classify pure substances — the next logical step in understanding what matter is made of.

In this lesson you'll learn what elements and compounds are, how to read simple chemical formulas, and why the difference matters in the real world.


What is a pure substance?

A pure substance is matter that has a fixed, uniform composition and predictable properties. Think of it as the science version of a perfectly curated playlist — everything in it belongs and follows the same rules.

Pure substances come in two main flavors:

  • Elements — made of only one kind of atom
  • Compounds — made of two or more kinds of atoms chemically bonded in a fixed ratio

We'll break both down now.


Elements — the basic building blocks

Micro explanation

An element is a substance made of only one type of atom. Each element is defined by the number of protons in its atoms (that number is the atomic number you saw on the periodic table).

Everyday examples

  • Iron (Fe) — the metal in nails and bridges
  • Oxygen (O2) — the gas you breathe (oxygen atoms pair up into O2 molecules, but it is still one element)
  • Gold (Au) — that shiny useful stuff for jewelry and bad bribes

How we write elements

Elements are shown using chemical symbols from the periodic table. Examples:

H  (hydrogen)
O  (oxygen)
Fe (iron)
Au (gold)

Key idea

Elements cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means. (You could split oxygen molecules physically into atoms, or split an element into ions or subatomic particles with fancy equipment, but you cannot turn gold into a simpler substance by ordinary chemistry.)


Compounds — new substances from atoms that bond

Micro explanation

A compound is a substance formed when two or more different elements chemically combine in a fixed proportion. The result has properties different from the elements that make it up.

Everyday examples

  • Water — H2O (liquid that keeps you alive; not just hydrogen and oxygen lying around)
  • Salt — NaCl (table salt; sodium metal and chlorine gas are both dangerous alone)
  • Carbon dioxide — CO2 (a gas plants use, animals produce)

How we write compounds

Compounds are written with chemical formulas that show the elements and the number of atoms of each element in a molecule:

H2O  -> 2 hydrogen atoms + 1 oxygen atom
NaCl -> 1 sodium atom + 1 chlorine atom
CO2  -> 1 carbon atom + 2 oxygen atoms

Law of Definite (Constant) Composition

A compound always contains the same elements in the same proportion by mass. For example: every sample of pure water has hydrogen and oxygen in a mass ratio of about 1:8 (because 2 H atoms + 1 O atom gives that mass ratio). That is why a compound is predictable.


Elements vs Compounds — a quick comparison

  • Elements: one kind of atom, cannot be broken down by chemical reactions into simpler substances
  • Compounds: two or more elements chemically combined, can be broken down into elements by chemical reactions
Feature Element Compound
Composition One kind of atom Two or more kinds of atoms
Chemical formula Single symbol (e.g., O) Multi-element formula (e.g., H2O)
Properties Similar to the atoms Often different from constituent elements
Can be separated by physical means? No (except nuclear/particle physics) Yes — but only by chemical reactions (not simple filtering)

Why bonding matters (brief, connect to atomic models)

Remember from the atomic models you just studied: electrons play a major role in chemical behavior. When atoms interact, they form bonds by sharing or transferring electrons. Two common bond types:

  • Ionic bonds — atoms transfer electrons (e.g., NaCl: sodium gives an electron to chlorine)
  • Covalent bonds — atoms share electrons (e.g., H2O: hydrogens share electrons with oxygen)

So the modern atomic theory you learned helps explain why compounds form and why their properties differ from the starting elements.


Simple classroom demo ideas

  • Electrolysis of water: split water into hydrogen and oxygen — shows water is made from elements.
  • Dissolving salt in water vs mixing sand in water: salt dissolves to form a homogeneous solution (and can be recovered by evaporation), showing different types of substances and mixtures.

Small worked example: Why is water a compound?

  1. Formula: H2O means 2 H atoms and 1 O atom per molecule.
  2. Properties: Water is a liquid at room temperature; hydrogen is a gas and oxygen is a gas.
  3. Conclusion: Since two different elements are chemically combined and the properties of the result are different, water is a compound.

Practice prompts (try these)

  1. Classify the following as element or compound: N2, Ca, CO, C (graphite), H2O2.
  2. Write the formula for carbon tetrachloride (carbon + 4 chlorine atoms).
  3. Explain in one sentence why table salt (NaCl) is not just a mixture of sodium and chlorine.

Answers (check after trying):

  1. N2 - element (molecule of nitrogen); Ca - element; CO - compound; C (graphite) - element; H2O2 - compound (hydrogen peroxide).
  2. CCl4
  3. NaCl is a compound because sodium and chlorine are chemically bonded in a fixed ratio and produce a substance with different properties from either sodium metal or chlorine gas.

Key takeaways

  • Elements are pure substances made of one kind of atom.
  • Compounds are pure substances made by chemically combining two or more elements in fixed ratios.
  • Chemical formulas tell you what elements are present and how many atoms of each.
  • The modern atomic model explains why atoms bond to form compounds (electrons are the star of the bonding show).

Final thought: Think of atoms as LEGO bricks. Elements are bricks of one color. Compounds are the models you build from different-colored bricks. The same bricks, arranged differently, give you a tiny boat, a tiny house, or a tiny chaos of pieces on the floor. Chemistry is the instruction manual.


Tags: grade 9 chemistry, elements and compounds, pure substances

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