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Chapter 2: the chemistry of life . General Biology 2010-2011. Section 2.1 The Nature of Matter Atoms are the basic unit of all matter. Protons and Neutrons have about the same mass Protons are positively charged. Neutrons are neutral , they have no charge at all. . What is Science?.
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Chapter 2: the chemistry of life General Biology 2010-2011
Section 2.1 The Nature of Matter Atoms are the basic unit of all matter. • Protons and Neutrons have about the same mass • Protons are positively charged. • Neutrons are neutral, they have no charge at all.
What is Science? • A little history! • 2500 years ago: • Greek philosopher Democritus thought that there was a limit on how much matter could be broken apart. • Was he correct?
Electrons are negatively charged particles. • Electrons are smaller than a proton, - An electron is 1/1840 the mass of a proton. • They are attracted to the positively charged protons. • Electrons have a lot of energy and are always in motion.
Atoms have an equal amount of electrons and protons. • This balances the charge of the atom. • This results in no charge. • Key question – What three particles make up atoms?
Elements and Isotopes • Elements are made up of only one kind of atom: • Elements are a pure substance: • carbon (C) • sodium (NA) • The number of protons = atomic number
The atomic number of carbon: • 6 protons • 6 neutrons • _______ = mass number of carbon (carbon 12) • Isotopes • Same element with a different number of neutrons.
Example: Carbon always has 6 protons, but may have 6, 7 or 8 neutrons. • Radioactive Isotopes • The nucleus of an atom breaking down over time is radioactive isotopes. • Radioactive isotopes: • can help determine the age of rocks and fossils. • treat cancer • can trace how substances move in organisms.
Key Question – How are all of the isotopes of an element similar? • Chemical Compounds • A compound is a formed substance from a chemical combination of two or more elements. • A chemical formula shows the number of each element in a compound. • Example: water H₂0
Physical properties of a compound are different then the properties of the elements that they came from. • Example: oxygen can be a gas or a liquid. • Key Question – How do compounds differ from the elements in them? .
Chemical Bonds • Ionic Bonds – are formed when one or more electrons are moved, or transferred from one atom to another. • Covalent Bonds – when electrons are shared by atoms instead of being moved from one atom to the other.
The different types of covalent bonds are determined by how many electrons are shared. • Example: 2 electrons are shared – single bond • 4 electrons are shared - double bond • 6 electrons are shared – triple bond • Key Question: What are the main types of chemical bonds.
2.2 Properties of Water (The Water Molecule H₂0) • Polar Molecule • Water is neutral • Positive charges on its 10 protons balance out the negative charges on its atom10electrons. • Oxygen s have 8 protons whereas a hydrogen has only 1 (there are 2 oxygen molecules in water)
Electrons in the water molecules are pulled toward the oxygen atoms. Oxygen on one end and hydrogen on the other. Resulting in: slight negative charge on the oxygen atom slight positive charge on the hydrogen end.
Hydrogen Bonds (polar molecules attract each other) • Cohesion = attraction of molecules of the same substances. • Cohesion pulls water molecules together. • Adhesion = an attraction of molecules of different substances. • Example: water sticking to the side of glass. • Heat Capacity = amount of heat energy needed to increase substances.
Because of the hydrogen bonds, it’s hard for water molecules to move faster. • This helps to regulate the temperature of lakes and oceans. • Key Question – How does the structure of water lead to its special properties?
Solutions and Suspensions • Solutions = mixture in a mixed substance is evenly spread out. • Suspensions = mixture of water and a non-dissolved material that do not settle out. • Acids, Bases, and PH • Ions – are water molecules that break apart Equation = H₂0 ↔ H⁺ + H0⁻
The pH Scale = concentration of H⁺ions in a solution (PH scale 0-14) • PH of 7 is where the H⁺and HO⁻ ions are equal • Example: water (PH of 7) • Acids = releases H⁺ ions in solution. PH below 7 would have a higher acidity. • Basis = compound that releases hydroxide (HO⁻). • PH values above 7. • Example: lie soap PH 11-14
Buffers = equalize or stop sudden changes in PH • Examples: Blood, they play a strong role in controlling homeostasis.
2.3 Carbon Compounds • The chemistry of carbon • There are two reasons why carbon is so very important to living things. • The first reason is: • Carbon has four electrons available for bonding. • Can bond with many elements • Makes it possible to form the molecules of living things.
The second reason is that carbon atoms can bond with each other. • Carbon can make long chains, and form many different types of compounds. Key Question – What elements does carbon bond with to make up life’s functions?
Not in notes Carbon bonds with: • hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus sulfur and nitrogen • this allows the formation of living things • living things are made from carbon and these other elements. • Carbon can also bond with each other • Resulting in an unlimited length Whale evolution timeline
Not in notes • These bonds can be • single, double, triple, covalent bonds or rings • This results in the ability to form millions of different large and complex structures.
Macromolecules = (carbon compounds) • Polymers - thousands or hundreds of thousands of smaller molecules that join together. • Monomers are smaller units that join together like links in a chain. (they form polymers) • Carbohydrates • Simple sugars
The four major groups of macromolecules are • Carbohydrates • Lipids (fats) • Nucleic acids • Protein • Key Question – What are the functions of carbohydrates?
Carbohydrates = compounds made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen • Are used as a main source of energy in living things. (the breakdown of sugars, glucose supply energy for cell activity). • Starch is extra stored energy (glucose). • Give plants, some animals and other organisms structure (cellulose) cell wall of a plant.
Simple sugars = molecule called monosaccharide's (simple sugars) • Example: galactose (found in milk) • fructose (found in many fruits) • sucrose (table sugar): • Both fructose and sucrose • Complex Carbohydrates = macromolecules formed when simple sugars join together.
Animals store extra sugar called glycogen • Replaces low sugar in your blood • Gives muscles energy to move • Lipids – do not dissolve in water, and are made mostly of carbon and hydrogen atoms. • Store energy • Form biological membranes (cell membrane) • Waterproofing
Saturated fats and unsaturated fats have different types of carbon bonds. • Saturated fats are liquid at room temperature. • Example (olive oil) • Key Question – What are the functions of lipids? (fats)
Nucleic Acids • Macromolecules containing oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus • It stores and transmits genetic information • Key Question – What are the functions of nucleic acids?
Proteins • Macromolecules that contain nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. • Proteins are polymers of molecules called amino acids. • Structure and Function • 20 different amino acids are found in nature.
C. Fields of Biology • Levels of Structure: • Amino acids are joined in a long chain according to the DNA instructions • Key Question – What are the functions of proteins?
2.4 Chemical Reactions and Enzymes • Chemical Reactions • Is a process that change one set of chemicals with another. • Some use energy and some release energy • This produces chemical reactions in living things • Products are elements or compounds that come out of a chemical reaction. • Some bonds are broken and some are formed http://www.northland.cc.mn.us/biology/biology1111/animations/enzyme.swf
Key Question – What happens to chemical bonds during a chemical reaction? • Energy in Reactions • Chemical reactions involve change in energy. • This happens whenever chemical bonds are formed or broken.
Energy Changes • Chemical reactions that give off energy often happen automatically • Chemical reactions that take in energy need a source of energy to happen • Hydrogen reacts with oxygen to make water vapor: • 2H₂ + O₂ → 2HO₂
Energy Sources • Plants get their energy from trapping and storing the energy from sunlight. • Animals get their energy from eating plants or other animals.
Activation Energy • Chemical reactions that give off energy will not always happen by themselves. • Example: cellulose in paper can burn, but needs a match to do so. • It needs a reaction. • Energy is involved in all chemical reactions.
Key Question – How do energy changes affect whether a chemical reaction will happen? • Enzymes = chemical reactions that make life possible. • Natures Catalysts • A catalyst is a substance that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction • Catalysts work by lowering the reactions activation energy.
The joining of carbon dioxide and water, which makes carbonic acid Co₂ + H₂O → H CO₃
Enzymes and Substrates • For a chemical reaction to take place: • Reactant must be hit with enough energy for bonds to break, and new bonds to form. • The enzyme has a breaking site that where reactants are brought together.
This site is called a substrate which bonds to the active site and weakens the chemical bonds.
Controlling how enzymes work • controlling chemical reactions • Making materials for cells • Giving off energy • Sending information
Temperature, Ph, and other molecules can affect how enzymes work. • How enzymes work best: • The temperature at 37 celcius. • Normal human body temperature • Certain PH values (example: enzymes in the stomach work best acidic solutions) http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter2/animation__how_enzymes_work.html
Enzymes are controlled y molecules that switch on or off. Key question – What role do enzymes play in living things and what affects their function?