By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define matter as having mass and occupying space
  • 2Differentiate pure substances and mixtures
  • 3Identify common separation methods
  • 4Match each method to a suitable mixture
  • 5Explain winnowing and filtration
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Why this chapter matters
Matter Around Us explains what everything is made of and the everyday methods we use to separate mixtures. Matter, mixtures and separation methods are directly tested book-back content in the TN Class 6 Term 1 exam.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Matter Around Us — Class 6 Science (Samacheer Kalvi)

TN State Board (Samacheer Kalvi) Class 6 Science, Term 1 — Chapter 3. Matter and how to separate mixtures.


1. About this chapter

This chapter covers what matter is, pure substances and mixtures, and the methods of separating mixtures.

2. Matter

  • Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. So 200 mL of water poured into a 400 mL bowl still has a volume of 200 mL — matter takes up a definite space. A light ray is not matter (it has no mass).
  • A pure substance has only one kind of particle; a mixture has two or more substances mixed together. Air is a mixture of gases, not a pure substance.

3. Methods of separating mixtures

MethodUse / example
Hand-pickingremoving big bits by hand — e.g. watermelon seeds, stones from rice
Winnowingwind separates lighter and heavier particles — e.g. grain from husk, dust or paper bits from pulses (needs air)
Sievingseparates solid particles of different sizes — e.g. bran from flour
Filtrationseparates an insoluble solid from a liquid — e.g. paneer (cheese) from milk
Decantationpouring off the liquid — e.g. water from washed pulses
Churningseparates butter from curd

4. Worked examples

Example 1. How is grain separated from husk? By winnowing (using air/wind).

Example 2. How is butter separated from curd? By churning.

Example 3. How is paneer separated from milk? By filtration (using a strainer).

5. Book-back questions (Samacheer Kalvi)

I. Choose the correct answer

  1. Which is not made of matter? — (a) water / (b) a light ray. Ans: (b) a light ray.
  2. 200 mL of water poured into a 400 mL bowl has a volume of — (a) 400 mL / (b) 200 mL. Ans: (b) 200 mL.
  3. Lighter impurities mixed with rice are removed by — (a) hand-picking / (b) winnowing. Ans: (b) winnowing.
  4. A solid–liquid mixture is best separated by — (a) sieving / (b) filtration. Ans: (b) filtration.

II. True or False 5. A strainer is a kind of sieve used to separate a liquid from a solid. — True. 6. Grain and husk can be separated by winnowing. — True. 7. Air is a pure substance. — False (it is a mixture of gases). 8. Butter is separated from curd by sedimentation. — False (by churning).

III. Answer briefly 9. How are bits of paper separated from pulses? — By winnowing, as the light paper is blown away and the heavier pulses fall close by. 10. Which method separates bran from flour? — Sieving.

6. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Calling air a pure substance. Fix: Air is a mixture of gases.
  • Mistake: Using filtration to separate butter from curd. Fix: Butter is separated by churning.
  • Mistake: Thinking light is matter. Fix: A light ray has no mass, so it is not matter.

7. Quick revision

  • Term 1 · Ch 3 · matter around us.
  • Matter has mass and occupies space (light is not matter); air is a mixture of gases.
  • Separation methods: hand-picking (seeds), winnowing (grain/husk, uses air), sieving (bran/flour), filtration (paneer/milk), decantation (water from pulses), churning (butter from curd).

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Matter
has mass and occupies space
Light is not matter.
Mixture
two or more substances mixed
Air is a mixture of gases.
Separation (solid-solid)
hand-picking, winnowing, sieving
By size/weight.
Separation (solid-liquid)
filtration, decantation, churning
Paneer, water, butter.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Calling air a pure substance
Air is a mixture of gases.
WATCH OUT
Using filtration to separate butter from curd
Butter is separated by churning.
WATCH OUT
Thinking light is matter
A light ray has no mass, so it is not matter.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· MCQ
Which is not made of matter: water or a light ray?
Show solution
A light ray (it has no mass).
Q2EASY· MCQ
Lighter impurities mixed with rice are removed by ____.
Show solution
winnowing.
Q3EASY· MCQ
A solid-liquid mixture is best separated by ____.
Show solution
filtration.
Q4EASY· True/False
True or False: Air is a pure substance.
Show solution
False — air is a mixture of gases.
Q5EASY· True/False
True or False: Butter is separated from curd by sedimentation.
Show solution
False — it is separated by churning.
Q6MEDIUM· Answer briefly
How are bits of paper separated from pulses?
Show solution
By winnowing — the lighter bits of paper are blown away by the wind while the heavier pulses fall straight down.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Term 1 Chapter 3 of Samacheer Kalvi Class 6 Science.
  • Matter has mass and occupies space; a light ray is not matter.
  • A mixture has two or more substances; air is a mixture of gases.
  • Hand-picking removes big bits; winnowing uses air to separate grain from husk.
  • Sieving separates solids of different sizes (bran from flour).
  • Filtration separates a solid from a liquid (paneer from milk); churning separates butter from curd.

Tamil Nadu (TNBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-10 marks across book-back MCQ, true/false and short answers

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / True-False15-7Matter, mixtures, separation
Short Answer21-2Separation methods
Prep strategy
  • Remember matter has mass and occupies space
  • Match each separation method to a mixture
  • Note winnowing needs air
  • Use filtration for solid-liquid mixtures

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Kitchen

Winnowing, sieving and filtration are used in cooking.

Farming

Grain is separated from husk by winnowing.

Water

Filtration helps clean water for use.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. State matter has mass and occupies space
  2. Match each method to its mixture
  3. Correct false statements with the right method
  4. Note air is a mixture

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Suggest a method to separate salt from sand using water.
  • Explain why filtration works for a solid-liquid mixture but not for two liquids.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

TN Class 6 Term 1 ExamHigh
NMMS / Foundation ScienceMedium
School unit testsHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Matter must have mass and occupy space, but a light ray has no mass and does not take up space, so it is a form of energy, not matter.

Air is made up of several gases — mainly nitrogen and oxygen, with carbon dioxide and others — mixed together physically, so it is a mixture rather than a single pure substance.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 4 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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