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CHEM 330 Lecture 2 Water (G&G, Chapter 2). 2.1 Properties of Water 2.2 pH 2.3 Buffers 2.4 Water's Unique Role in the Fitness of the Environment. For a small molecule, water is weird. Bulk Properties Abnormally high b.p., m.p. Abnormally high surface tension The Molecular Explanation
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CHEM 330 Lecture 2 Water (G&G, Chapter 2) • 2.1 Properties of Water • 2.2 pH • 2.3 Buffers • 2.4 Water's Unique Role in the Fitness of the Environment
For a small molecule, water is weird Bulk Properties • Abnormally high b.p., m.p. • Abnormally high surface tension The Molecular Explanation • H-bond donor and acceptor • ~ tetrahedral bond angles • Potential to form four H-bonds per water molecule • Bent structure makes it polar
d+ d- d+ Water Close Up Dipole Moment : Two lone electron pairs Bond angle 104.3° : Covalent Bond Length Between H and O: 0.95 Å Potential to form four H-bonds per water molecule
Comparison of Ice and Water(or: what separates the frozen from the fluid?) Number of H-bonds • Ice: 4 H-bonds per water molecule • Water: 2.3 H-bonds per water molecule (on average) Lifetime of H-bonds • Ice: H-bond lifetime ~ 10-5 sec • Water: H-bond lifetime ~ 10-11 sec
The Dynamics of Liquid Water “Flickering” H bonds in water: a series of snapshots at 5 picosecond intervals Figure 2.3
Solvent Properties of Water • Interaction with electrolytes • Interaction with polar, uncharged molecules • Interaction with nonpolar molecules
Electrolytes Compounds yielding ions when added to water Strong electrolytes: ionization is complete, eg H2O salts strong acids strong bases NaCl Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq) H2SO42H+ (aq ) + SO42-(aq) NaOH Na+ (aq) + OH- (aq) Major biological strong electrolytes: Phosphates, KCl, NaCl, CaCl2 Note that a solution containing electrolytes, though rich in ions, is electrically neutral
Weak electrolytes: ionization* isincomplete: CH3COOH+ H2O CH3COO- + H3O+ organic acids organic bases CH3-NH2+ H2O CH3-NH3+ + OH- Major weak electrolytes in biology: Amines, imines, carboxylic acids * another term for ionization isdissociation
in solution What effect does the intervening solvent have? e1e2 e1e2 F F = r2 Dr2 D: the dielectric constant of the solvent Solvent Dielectric constant (D) water 78.5 methanol 32.6 acetone 20.7 benzene 2.3 As D increases, ions in solution interact more weakly with each other & more strongly with the solvent Ionic interactions r - + charge e2 charge e1
- + + Interaction of water with ions:no naked ions Cl- Chloride anion Na+ Sodium cation water Dipoles of water screen the charges of the ions so they don’t sense one another- water has a high dielectric constant
Water & polar neutral molecules: hydrogen bonding Water forms extensive H-bonds with molecules such as glucose, rendering it highly soluble
Life’s trouble with solutions, and life’s solution Water: can pass through membrane; tendency is to dilute the cell contents causing cell to burst What to do? Cell, full of solutes, which cannot pass through membrane Countermeasures 1) Strong cell wall (bacteria, single-cell eukaryotes) 2) Surround cells with an isotonic environment (multicellular eukaryotes)
Water & nonpolar molecules: Hydrophobic Interactions • H-bond network of water reorganizes to accommodate the nonpolar solute • This is an increase in "order" of water (a decrease in entropy) • number of ordered water molecules is minimized by herding nonpolar solutes together Yellow blob: nonpolar solute (eg oil)
Solvent Properties of Water- Recap • Water forms H-bonds with polar solutes • Ions in water are always surrounded by a hydration shell (no naked ions) • Hydrophilic (polar): water-soluble molecules • Hydrophobic (nonpolar): water insoluble (greasy) • Hydrophobic interaction: fewer water molecules are needed to corral one large aggregate than many small aggregates of a hydrophobic molecule Hydrophilic, hydrophobic - anything else?
Amphiphilic Molecules Also called "amphipathic" • Contain both polar and nonpolar groups • Attracted to both polar and nonpolar environments • Eg - fatty acids Polar head (carboxylic acid) Nonpolar hydrocarbon tail What happens in water?
Amphiphiles in water Hydrophilic domains face water Hydrophobic domains shielded from water Variety of structures possible Wedge-shaped amphiphiles form micelles (spherical) Cylinder-shaped amphiphiles form bilayers (planar)
Protons in solution - why are they so important ? • Most biomolecules bear groups that can undergo reversible protonation/deprotonation reaction • The conformation and functions of these biomolecules may depend on their protonation state: • -Active sites of hydrolytic enzymes • -Overall fold of proteins • Establishment of proton concentration gradients across biological membranes is central to an understanding of cell energetics The study of acid-base equilibria lets us quantify these effects
H2O XH X- + H+ BH+ B + H+ H2O Acid-base Equilibria: Dissociation of protons from molecules in aqueous solution Measure [H+] to indicate degree of acidity Simple, but cumbersome: eg “physiological” [H+] ranges from ~ 0.5 M (stomach) ~ 0.00000001 M (blood)
The pH Scale • A convenient means of writing low concentrations of protons: • pH = -log10 [H+] • If [H+] = 1 x 10 -7 M (0.0000001 M) • Then pH = 7 Low pH indicates a high proton concentration (high acidity) High pH indicates a low proton concentration High pH indicates a high concentration of hydroxide -OH (high basicity) Each difference of 1 pH unit is a ten-fold difference in proton concentration
_ Dissociation of Water: water as a source of ions H+ Proton Hydroxide Little tendency to dissociate under neutral conditions
No Naked Protons! H+ in aqueous solution exists as H3O+
Proton movement through water: faster than any other ions
[ H + ] [ A - ] Ka = [HA] Dissociation of Weak Electrolytes Consider a weak acid, HA: HA H+ + A- The acid dissociation constant, Ka, is given by:
[A-] [HA] pH = pKa + log10 The Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation For any acid HA, the relationship between its pKa, the concentrations of HA and A- existing at equilibrium, and the solution pH is given by: Given any two parameters, you can solve the third