Chapter 10: Cell Growth and Division Honors Biology/Chemistry 2013.
Chapter 2: The Chemistry of Biology
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Transcript of Chapter 2: The Chemistry of Biology
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Chapter 2: The Chemistry of Biology
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The Composition of the UniverseA. Element: a pure substance that cannot be broken down chemically into other kinds of matter.
1. Ex: Oxygen, Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0zION8xjbM&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1
http://vimeo.com/4433312
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The Composition of the UniverseB. Atom: simplest part of an elementC. Subatomic Particles: Parts of an atom1. Protons: positively (+) charged particlesa. Found in the nucleus of an atom
2. Neutrons: neutral particlesa. Found in the nucleus of an atom
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqNSQ3OQMGI
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The Composition of the Universe3. Electrons: negatively charged particles
a. Found moving around the nucleus in energy levels
b. Valence electrons – electrons in the last shell or energy level of an atom
** Hint: ** The number of valence electrons for an atom, is determined by the column (group) number it falls under on the Periodic Table of Elements. For example, an atom in the 3rd column, have 3 valence electrons.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqNSQ3OQMGI
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The Composition of the UniverseThe Electron Energy Levels
Bohr Model of Carbon:
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The Composition of the Universe Lewis Dot Structure:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqNSQ3OQMGI
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The Composition of the UniverseD. How do you determine the number of protons?1. Equal to the atomic number
E. How do you determine the number of electrons?
1. Equal to the # of protons (atomic number) in a stable atom
F. How do you determine the number of neutrons?
1. Equal to the Atomic Mass (rounded) – Atomic #
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The Composition of the UniverseThe Electron Energy Levels
Bohr Model of Carbon:
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BondingA. All atoms “want” to be stable; if they do not have 8 valence electrons in their outer most shell, then they tend to undergo reactions to find stability
1. BONDS are then formed!
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BondingType of Bond
Occurs or
Found Betwee
n?
How is the bond
formed?
Additional Info
Ionic Metals and Non-metals
Electrons are transferred between atoms
Ion: positive & negatively charged atoms formed (Na+, Cl-)
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Bonding Is it easier for Potassium to gain or lose
electrons to have a stable outermost ring of electrons?
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BondingWhat about Chlorine?
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The Composition of the Universe Ionic Bonding Results
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The Composition of the Universe
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BondingType of Bond
Occurs or Found
Between?
How is the bond formed?
Additional Info
Covalent 2 or more Non-metals
Electrons are shared between atoms
Can be polar or non-polar bonds depending on electron sharing
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BondingType of Bond
Occurs or Found
Between?
How is the bond formed?
Additional Info
Van der waals forces
Between molecules
(intermolecular)
Oppositely charged areas of molecules are attracted to each other
Very weak bonds; allows geckos to walk upside down; found between water molecules
ATTRACTION OF DIFFERENT CHARGES BETWEEN MOLECULES
+
-
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Bonding Ex: Gecko Foot – has half a
million hair like projections that are divided into fibers
Forces form between the hairs on the feet and surface allowing the gecko to balance gravity
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OoYeIsSkafI
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Building More Complex SubstancesB. Building More Complex Substances
1. Compound: substance formed by the chemical combination of atoms from two or more
elementsa. Ex: H2O (water), C6H12O6 (glucose), CO2
(carbon dioxide) The properties of the compound are different than
those of the elements that create it!
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Building More Complex SubstancesB. Molecule: the simplest form of a compound; when two or more atoms join
1. Ex: O2 (oxygen gas), H2O (water)*All compounds are molecules, but not all
molecules are compounds**
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Mixing It Up…Solutions!A. Solution: a mixture in which one or more substances are uniformly distributed in another substance.
1. Two major componentsa. Solute: substance dissolved into the solutionb. Solvent: substance in
which the solute is dissolved
Ex: WATER IS THE UNIVERSAL SOLVENT
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Mixing It Up…Solutions!B. How do we analyze the strength of a solution?
Concentration (amount of solute dissolved in solution)
100mL 100mL 100mL 100mL 100mL
10g 20g 30g 40g 50g
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pH ScaleA. pH Scale: measures the concentration of hydrogen (H+) ions and hydroxide ions (OH-) in solution
Range of the Scale: 0-14
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pHAcid:
Range: 0-7 H+ Ions: [High] OH – Ions: [Low]
Ex: HCl (stomach acid), milk
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pHBase:
Range: 7-14 H+ ions: [Low] OH- ions: [High]
Ex: Blood, Ammonia, Sea Water
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pHNeutral:
Range: 7 H+ ions: [Equal] OH- ions: [Equal]
Ex: WATER!
What are the strong acids? What are the strongest
bases?
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The Chemistry of WaterA. COVALENT bonds: join hydrogen and oxygen that make up water
1. Electrons are not shared EQUALLY!
a. Oxygen has 8 electrons
b. Hydrogen only has 1 electron
The oxygen atom pulls the shared electrons towards its own nucleus and away from the hydrogen.
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The Chemistry of WaterB. Polarity: the distribution of charges in atoms joined by a bond
1. Polar compound: a molecule with an uneven pattern of
charge or unequal sharing of electrons
a. Ex: Water, Sugars, Proteins, DNA (good at dissolving things!)
2. Non-polar compound: a molecule with an even pattern of charge or equal sharing of electrons
a. Ex: Oxygen gas, fats, waxes
+ +
-
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Polarity of WaterC. Polarity of WATER1. Causes water molecules to attract to each other or be “sticky” and form van der waals forces between thema. Hydrogen Bond: attraction holding two+ water molecules together
Positive (H+) region of one water molecule is attracted to the negative (O-) region of another
These are weak bonds; they can be broken easily!
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Why is hydrogen bonding important to life and biology?A. Creates cohesion of particles
1. Attractive forces between particles of the same type
a. Ex: Water “sticks” allowing striders to move across; Floating a paperclip on water
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Polarity of WaterSurface Tension: created by cohesion; a
force existing on the surface of a liquid, preventing the layer from being broken
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8O8PuMkiimg&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1
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Why is hydrogen bonding important to life and biology?B. Creates adhesion of particles
1. Attractive forces between different/unlike substances
a. Ex: meniscus on a test tube
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Why is hydrogen bonding important to life and biology?C. Capillary Action: water molecules move upward through narrow tubes against the force of gravity because of cohesion and adhesion
1. Ex: flower, redwood tree
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Why is hydrogen bonding important to life and biology?D. High Specific Heat Capacity & Heat of Vaporization:1. Water must gain or lose large amounts of energy (heat) to break the hydrogen bonds for any temperature change or evaporation to occur.
a. Why is this important? Helps organisms maintain homeostasis Helps moderate climate/ocean water
temperature
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Why is hydrogen bonding important to life and biology?E. Water EXPANDS becomes LESS dense when it freezes!
1. Why is this significant?a. Ice floats preventing the water
from freezing solid and insulates the lower layers, allowing life to survive underneath it
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Why is hydrogen bonding important to life and biology?F. Water is the universal solvent.
1. Water dissolves more solutes than any other liquid.
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Penny Lab Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=8O8PuMkiimg&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1