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CHEMISTRY. Elements. Pure substances that cannot be broken down chemically into simpler kinds of matter More than 100 elements (92 naturally occurring). 90% of the mass of an organism is composed of 4 elements (oxygen, carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen).
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Elements • Pure substances that cannot be broken down chemically into simpler kinds of matter • More than 100 elements (92 naturally occurring)
90% of the mass of an organism is composed of 4 elements (oxygen, carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen)
A compound is a pure substance made up of atoms of two or more elements • The proportion of atoms are always fixed • Chemical formula shows the kind and proportion of atoms of each element that occurs in a particular compound C6H12O6 + 6O2 6H2O +6CO2 + 36ATP subscripts Coefficient
Molecules are the simplest part of a compound that retains all of the properties of the substance and exists in a free state • Some molecules are large and complex
Chemical Formulas • Subscript after a symbol tell the number of atoms of each element • H20 has 2 atoms of hydrogen & 1 atom of oxygen • Coefficients before a formula tell the number of molecules • 3O2represents 3 molecules of oxygen or (3x2) or 6 atoms of oxygen
The tendency of elements to combine and form compounds depends on the number and arrangement of electrons in their outermost energy level • Atoms are most stable when their outer most energy level is full
Most atoms are not stable in their natural state (If they’re full, they won’t react) • Tend to react (combine) with other atoms in order to become more stable (undergo chemical reactions)
What are the 4 most common elements found in living things? • Hydrogen, sulfur, phosporous, calcium • Nitrogen, hydorgen, carbon, oxygen • Oxygen, sulfur, hydrogen, calcium • Carbon, hydrogen, phosphorous, nitrogen
Bonding with the four main Elements • H-needs 1 electron • O-needs 2 electrons • N- needs 3 electrons • C- needs 4 electron
C6H12O6 + 6O2 6H2O +6CO2 + 36ATP Reactants Products Chemical equations represent chemical reactions.
Covalent Bonds • Formed when two atoms share one or more pairs of electrons
Ionic Bonds • Some atoms become stable by losing or gaining electrons • Atoms that lose electrons are called positive ions
Atoms that gain electrons are called negative ions • Because positive and negative electrical charges attract each other ionic bonds form
2. Why do atoms form bonds? • To change from a gaseous state • To become more stable • To build larger molecules • To gather more electrons
Energy and Matter • Energy • The ability to do work or cause change • Can be converted to another form
Energy and Chemical Reactions • Living things undergo thousands of chemical reactions as part of the life process (Metabolism)
Energy Transfer • Much of the energy organisms need is provided by sugar (glucose) • Undergoes a series of chemical reactions in which energy is released (cell respiration)
3. How many bonds can carbon atoms form? • 1 • 2 • 3 • 4
4. Where are reactants found in a chemical equation? • On the left side • On the right side • Beneath the arrow • Above the arrow
Most chemical reactions require energy to begin • The amount of energy needed to start the reaction is called activation energy
Certain chemical substances (catalysts)reduce the amount of activation energy required • Biological catalysts are called enzymes
Enzymes are an important class of catalysts in living organisms • Mostly protein • Thousands of different kinds • Each specific for a different chemical reaction
Enzyme Structure • Enzymes work on substances called substrates • Substrates must fit into a place on an enzyme called the active site • Enzymes are reusable!
5. The place on the enzyme into which the substrate fits is the __________ site. • Reaction • Metabolizing • Catalyzing • Active
Solutions • A solution is a mixture in which 2 or more substances are uniformly distributed in another substance
6. An enzyme is a(n) • Protein • Element • Substrate • atom
Solute is the substance dissolved in the solution • Particles may be ions, atoms, or molecules • Solvent is the substance in which the solute is dissolved • Water is the universal solvent
Solutions can be composed of varying proportions of a given solute in a given solvent --- vary in concentration(measurement of the amount of solute) • A saturated solution is one in which no more solute can be dissolved • Aqueous solution(water) are universally important to living things
Dissociation of water • Breaking apart of the water molecule into two ions of opposite charge (due to strong attraction of oxygen atom of one molecule for H atom of another water molecule) • OH-(hydroxide ion) • H+(hydronium ion)
Acids and Bases • One of the most important aspects of a living system is the degree of acidity or alkalinity
Acids • Number of hydronium ions in solutions is greater than the number of hydroxide ions
Bases • Number of hydroxide ions in solution is greater than the number of hydronium ions
pH Scale • concentrations of hydronium ions and hydroxide ions in a solution • ranges from 0 to 14 • Each pH is 10X stronger than next • e.g. ph 1 is 10 times stronger than ph 2
the lower the pH the stronger the acid • the higher the pH the stronger the base • pH 7.0 is neutral
Buffers • Control of pH is very important • Most enzymes function only within a very narrow pH • Control is accomplished with buffers made by the body • Buffers keep a neutral pH (pH 7)
Buffers neutralize small amounts of either an acid or base added to a solution • Complex buffering systems maintain the pH values of your body’s many fluids at normal and safe levels
7. A liquid that has a pH of 3 is a(n) • Acid • Base • Neutral • Ion