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Bell Ringer Find your new spot on the seating chart (on front lab table). What makes something organic or inorganic? What do these four pictures have in common?
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Organic Compounds: The Molecules of Life
Any compound containing carbon (also oxygen and hydrogen) Two exceptions: CO2 and CO Also called organic chemistry Four Macromolecules (large molecules): Carbohydrates Proteins Lipids Nucleic Acids
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Carbon’s Bonding Behavior
Outer shell of C has 4 e-’s Can hold 8 e-’s Each C atom can form covalent bonds with up to 4 atoms C may form single, double, or triple bonds
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(ball-and-stick model)
Bonding Arrangements Carbon atoms can form chains or rings Other atoms project from the carbon backbone Glucose (ball-and-stick model)
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What is a monomer & a polymer?
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The Polymer Party Video
Write about each Polymer that is introduced. If we are studying organic polymers who will we be studying?
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Polymers & Monomers Polymer Monomer Large molecule (macromolecule)
Made up of many small subunits called monomers Monomer Small molecule that can be linked together to form a large molecule Ex: carbohydrate polymer simple sugar (glucose) monomer
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Carbohydrates Ratio is always 1 C: 2 H: 1 O or C1H2O1 Functions
provide energy Structural support Energy comes from breaking the C-H bonds Subunit/Building Block is a monosaccharide Aka -- simple sugar
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Monosaccharide Building block of carbohydrates AKA, simple sugar
Examples: Glucose Fructose Galactose Ribose Deoxyribose
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Monosaccharide Examples
glucose
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Disaccharide Two monosaccharides that have been linked together
What type of chemical reaction links them together? What type of chemical reaction breaks them apart during digestion? Examples Sucrose: glucose + fructose Lactose: glucose + galactose Maltose: glucose + glucose
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Disaccharide Examples
Sucrose
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Polysaccharides Many monosaccharides linked together (usually more than 8) Some provide energy Starch plants Glycogen animals (stored in liver & muscle) Some provide structural support Cellulose plant cell walls Chitin fungi cell walls & insect exoskeleton
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Polysaccharides Examples
Glycogen
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Carbohydrates: Examples
Monosaccharides Simple sugars Glucose, fructose, galactose Disaccharides Two simple sugars Sucrose, Maltose, and Lactose Polysaccharides Complex carbohydrates Glycogen & starch (storage) Chitin & cellulose (structural) Cellulose fibers in the plant cell wall.
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Carbohydrate Flipbook
Answer the questions first. Using scissors and a glue stick cut the monomers for carbohydrates out. On the back side of the cover page create a monosaccharide, disaccharide, and polysaccharide. Label and provide an example of each.
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Organic Molecules Work Sheet
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How do carbohydrates impact your health?
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Closure: Draw the nomenclature of a monosaccharide, disaccharide, and polysaccharide. What are the functions of a carbohydrate? Homework: Watch Bozeman’s carb video and answer questions (#4 on weebly)
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