The document discusses materials and their properties. It defines materials as physical substances used to make things and lists some main categories as metals, plastics, ceramics, glass and fibers. Everything around us is made of one or more materials. It then discusses properties that describe materials like hard, flexible, strong, etc. and provides examples of properties that could be used to describe common objects like pencils, windows, paper and forks. The document also categorizes materials into groups like metals which are good conductors of heat and electricity and are often shiny, strong and sometimes magnetic.
2. A material is a physical substance used to
make things.
Metals, plastics, ceramics, glass and fibres
are some of the main categories for
materials.
If we look around, everything we see is
made from a material, sometimes more
than one ....
3. For example:
The clothes you are wearing are made from
fibres.
The chair you are sitting on is made from
plastic.
The windows in the school are made from
glass.
Can you see any other examples
around you?
4. A property of a material is a description of
the characteristics which it has. They are
adjectives which tell us about the material.
Materials have different properties and
characteristics depending on what they are
used for.
Some materials are hard, others are soft.
Some are strong, others are weak.
5. Here is a list of the properties which describe different
materials:
Shiny – It reflects light
Strong – It won’t break easily
Flexible – It can be bent easily without breaking
Light - It doesn’t weigh much
Heavy – It weighs a lot
Coloured – Has colour
Magnetic – It’s attracted to magnets
Bendy - Flexible
6. Hard – Something which can’t be bent easily
Brittle – It’s hard but will break easily
Malleable – It can be shaped easily
Magnetic – It’s attracted to magnets
Bendy – Flexible
Transparent – Something you can see through
Translucent – Something you can partially see through
Opaque – Something you can not see through
Conductor – It allows heat or electricity to pass through
Insulator – It doesn’t allow heat or electricity to pass through.
7. Which of the previous words could you
use to describe:
A) a pencil...
Hard, light, opaque
B) A window
Transparent or translucent, hard, brittle
C) A piece of paper...
Light, opaque, malleable
D) A fork...
Shiny, hard, magnetic, opaque, conductor
8. Materials can be categorised into
groups. One of the main groups is...
Shiny
Strong
Good
conductors of
heat and
electricity
Some are
magnetic
Usually opaque
E,g aluminium,
copper, iron,
lead...
9.
10. Q) Why is copper suitable for electrical
wiring? What properties must it have?
- Good conductor
of electricity
- It is strong.
11. Why are saucepans made from metal?
Which properties make it suitable for the
use?
- It is a good conductor or heat.
- It is It does not melt with high
temperatures.
- It is strong