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Science 7
Chapters

1Science Practices and Indigenous Knowledge in Context

2Ecosystems: Structure, Function, and Biodiversity

3Populations, Communities, Food Chains and Webs

4Biogeochemical Cycles: Water, Carbon, and Nitrogen

5Ecosystem Change: Disturbance, Succession, and Resilience

6Human Impacts, Sustainability, and Stewardship

7Particle Theory, Matter, Pure Substances and Mixtures

Particle Model of MatterStates of Matter and Kinetic TheoryElements, Compounds, and MoleculesPhysical and Chemical PropertiesPure Substances and MixturesMechanical Mixtures and HeterogeneitySolutions and HomogeneitySolute, Solvent, and AlloysConcentration Concepts OverviewSuspensions and ColloidsSolubility Factors OverviewDissolving versus MeltingQualitative and Quantitative TestsInterpreting Particle DiagramsSafety and Handling of Materials

8Separating Mixtures and Solutions: Methods and Impacts

9Solutions: Solubility, Concentration, and Applications

10Heat, Temperature, and States of Matter

11Heat Transfer: Conduction, Convection, Radiation, Technologies

12Earth's Crust: Plate Tectonics and Geological Events

13Geological Resources, Surface Geology, and Saskatchewan Soils

Courses/Science 7/Particle Theory, Matter, Pure Substances and Mixtures

Particle Theory, Matter, Pure Substances and Mixtures

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Use the particle model to distinguish elements, compounds, mechanical mixtures, and solutions through properties and evidence.

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Particle Model of Matter

Particle Model of Matter Explained for Science 7 Students
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Particle Model of Matter Explained for Science 7 Students

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Particle Model of Matter — A Science 7 Guide That Actually Clicks

This is the moment where the concept finally clicks.

You just finished thinking about ecological footprints and community stewardship. Nice work — now let's zoom in from that big-picture planet-saving swag to the tiniest players on stage: particles. Understanding the particle model of matter gives you the superpower to explain why oil and water won't mix, why microplastics hang around, and how simple separation methods (like filtration or distillation) actually help reduce pollution. In short: tiny things, big consequences.


What is the Particle Model of Matter?

Particle model of matter is a simple way to explain what all stuff is made of and how that stuff behaves. The model says:

  • Matter is made of extremely small particles (atoms or molecules).
  • These particles are always in motion.
  • There are forces of attraction between particles.
  • The amount of motion depends on the particles' energy (often from temperature).

Why it matters: this model explains the differences between solids, liquids, and gases, and it helps us predict changes like melting, boiling, mixing, and separation — key skills for sustainable stewardship and managing pollutants.


States of Matter — The Particle Party

Solids

  • Arrangement: tightly packed in a regular pattern
  • Motion: particles vibrate in place
  • Attraction: strong
  • Why you care: solids keep shape — think microplastics embedded in soil or sand

Liquids

  • Arrangement: close together but disordered
  • Motion: particles slide past each other
  • Attraction: moderate
  • Why you care: liquids flow and can carry dissolved pollutants (salt in ocean, pesticides in runoff)

Gases

  • Arrangement: far apart, random
  • Motion: move fast and freely
  • Attraction: very weak
  • Why you care: gases spread quickly — think greenhouse gases or airborne particulates

Quick Table: Visual Comparison

State Particle Spacing Motion Shape Volume
Solid Very close Vibrate Definite Definite
Liquid Close Slide Indefinite Definite
Gas Far apart Fast/random Indefinite Indefinite

Temperature, Energy, and State Changes

Temperature is basically a measure of how much kinetic energy particles have. Add energy -> particles move more -> can overcome attractions -> change state.

  • Melting: solid -> liquid (particles gain enough energy to break rigid structure)
  • Evaporation/Boiling: liquid -> gas (particles escape the liquid)
  • Condensation: gas -> liquid (particles lose energy and come closer)
  • Freezing: liquid -> solid (particles lose energy and lock into place)
  • Sublimation: solid -> gas (rare, but cool — like dry ice)

Micro explanation: Think of particles as a rowdy classroom. Heat is the energy drink. Add energy and the kids (particles) get wilder and move away from their seats.


Mixtures, Pure Substances, and Why That Helps Stewardship

  • Pure substance: made of only one type of particle (element or compound). Example: distilled water.
  • Mixture: two or more substances mixed together physically. Example: seawater, polluted air, soil containing microplastics and organic matter.

Why this matters for sustainability:

  • If you understand whether a pollutant is part of a mixture or a pure substance, you can pick the right separation method. For example, distillation can recover clean water from salty water; filtration can remove plastics from runoff.
  • Designing community action plans often involves choosing realistic separation and remediation techniques — particle thinking helps you choose wisely.

Real-world Examples: Particle Thinking in Action

  1. Oil spill in the ocean

    • Oil floats because oil particles mix with each other and don't bond well with water molecules.
    • Oil forms a separate layer — you can skim it because it's a mixture with different particle attractions.
  2. Microplastics in soil and waterways

    • Tiny solid particles get trapped in sediments or travel as part of a mixture in water.
    • Filtration and sedimentation take advantage of particle size and density differences to remove them.
  3. Air pollution (particulate matter)

    • Small solid or liquid particles suspended in air.
    • Because gas particles move a lot, these pollutants spread widely.
    • Reducing emissions reduces particle concentrations and improves community health.

Simple Classroom Demo You Can Do: Bead Jar Model

What you need: glass jar, small marbles/beads, rice/grit, water.

  1. Put marbles in jar to represent atoms in a solid (regular, rigid arrangement).
  2. Add rice to represent liquid particles (close but not ordered).
  3. Add water to show gas spacing concept by shaking — watch the beads move more.

Observation prompts:

  • How do the 'solid' marbles behave compared to rice?
  • What happens if you tilt the jar? (Liquids flow; solids don't.)

This visualization helps when you later design filtration or separation steps in sustainability projects.


How the Particle Model Helps You Design Better Stewardship Actions

  • Predict which pollutants will dissolve and spread (dissolved salts vs floating plastics).
  • Choose separation methods: filtration (size), distillation (boiling points), settling (density), chromatography (particle interactions).
  • Understand why temperature affects biodegradation and chemical reactions — warmer temperatures usually increase particle motion and reaction rates.

Think of it this way: if you want to clean a lake, you need to know whether the bad stuff is dissolved (needs chemical treatments or bioremediation) or particulate (needs filtration or dredging).


Common Misunderstandings (and the clap-back answers)

  • "Particles are visible like dust." — Particles can be atoms and molecules; most are too small to see. Microplastics are visible, molecules are not.
  • "Heat creates particles." — Heat just gives energy; it doesn't make particles; it changes their motion and arrangement.
  • "Gas has no particles." — Wrong. Gas has particles — they just spread out a lot.

Key Takeaways

  • The particle model explains matter by describing tiny particles in motion with attractions between them.
  • States of matter differ by particle arrangement, motion, and attraction strength.
  • Understanding particles helps you tackle environmental problems: choose separation methods, predict pollutant behavior, and design smarter stewardship actions.

Final memorable insight:

Tiny particles are the reason big environmental decisions work (or fail). Learn the particle moves, and you can choreograph cleaner, smarter solutions.


Want to push this further?

Try designing a mini stewardship plan: identify a local pollutant, state whether it is particulate or dissolved, then pick two practical separation or reduction methods and explain them using particle-model language. Tweet it to your class for extra credit (and bragging rights).

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