IMPORTANCE OF CHEMISTRY
Chemistry
is the study of matter, its properties, how and why substances combine or
separate to form other substances, and how substances interact with energy.
Many people think of chemists as being white-coated scientists mixing strange
liquids in a laboratory, but the truth is we are all chemists. Doctors,
nurses and veterinarians must study chemistry, but understanding basic
chemistry concepts is important for almost every profession. Chemistry is part
of everything in our lives. Every material in existence is made up of
matter — even our own bodies. Chemistry is involved in everything we do, from
growing and cooking food to cleaning our homes and bodies to launching a space
shuttle. Chemistry is one of the physical sciences that help us to describe and
explain our world. Everything you hear, see, smell, taste, and touch involves
chemistry and chemicals (matter). And hearing, seeing, tasting, and touching
all involve intricate series of chemical reactions and interactions in your
body. With such an enormous range of topics, it is essential to know about
chemistry at some level to understand the world around us.
In more
formal terms chemistry is the study of matter and the changes it can undergo.
Chemists sometimes refer to matter as ‘stuff’, and indeed so it is. Matter is
anything that has mass and occupies space. Which is to say, anything you can
touch or hold. Common usage might have us believe that ‘chemicals’ are just
those substances in laboratories or something that is not a natural substance.
Far from it, chemists believe that everything is made of chemicals.Although
there are countless types of matter all around us, this complexity is composed
of various combinations of some 100 chemical elements. The names of some of
these elements will be familiar to almost everyone. Elements such as hydrogen,
chlorine, silver, and copper are part of our everyday knowledge. Far fewer
people have heard of selenium or rubidium or hassium.
Nevertheless,
all matter is composed of various combinations of these basic elements. The
wonder of chemistry is that when these basic particles are combined, they make
something new and unique. Consider the element sodium. It is a soft, silvery
metal. It reacts violently with water, giving off hydrogen gas and enough heat
to make the hydrogen explode. Nasty ‘stuff’. Also consider chlorine, a green
gas when at room temperature. It is very caustic and choking, and is nasty
enough that it was used as a horrible chemical gas weapon in the last century.
So what kind of horrible mess is produced when sodium and chlorine are
combined? Nothing more than sodium chloride, common table salt. Table salt does
not explode in water or choke us; rather, it is a common additive for foods we
eat everyday.And so it is with chemistry, understanding the basic properties of
matter and learning how to predict and explain how they change when they react
to form new substances is what chemistry and chemists are all about.Chemistry
is not limited to beakers and laboratories. It is all around us, and the better
we know chemistry, the better we know our world.
Prof.
John Kurakar
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