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Biochemistry The chemical basis of life Based on organic (carbon) chemistry
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All living things are made of matter. Matter: material governed by laws of inertia (resistance to change in motion) The smallest organized unit of matter that is living is called a cell.
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Atomic structure video Click on image to play video.
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Matter of the same composition is a substance. Ex: pure sugar, pure salt, etc Substances can change. Living matter is made up of different substances. Therefore life can change.
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Periodic table of elements … do you need to know them all for this class?
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What elements do producers need? C HOPKNS café Managed By My Cousin Mo Cline CHOPKNS Ca Fe Mg B Mn Cu Zn Mo Cl
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Chemical reactions lead to changes in substance or matter. Occurs when electrons are transferred between two atoms covalent or ionic
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Substance types 1. Atom = electron + proton + neutron 2. Element: one atom with set number of protons(ex: nitrogen) 3. Compound: two or more atoms in fixed ratio (ex: water H 2 O) Q.What is in the beaker? 4. Molecule: 1 unit of a compound (ex: water H 2 O is 1 molecule of water) Q. How many molecules of water are in the beaker?
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To maintain life the following are needed. 96% of living matter: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen 4% of living matter: calcium, potassium, phosphorus, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, magnesium, iron, trace elements
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Why is carbon the basis for life? It has 4 electrons in its outer electron shell. Octet rule: The most stable elements have 8 electrons in its outer shell, with few exceptions. Carbon forms 4 covalent bonds to fulfill the octet rule.
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Covalent bond = two atoms sharing electrons “Strong” Relatively stable Hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen can readily form covalent bonds with carbon.
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Covalent bonding video Click on image to play video.
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Ions = electrically charged matter Ions form when electrons are lost or gained. Ionic bonds form when a positive ion is attracted to a negative ion.
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Ionic bonding video Click on image to play video.
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Making polymers When monomers (single units) transfer electrons between one another, they form dimers. Adding more monomers form polymers.
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Important polymers & complex molecules Polysaccharides Proteins Nucleic acids Lipids
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MethaneAcetyleneButadieneBenzeneIsooctane Section 2-3 Figure 2-11 Carbon Compounds
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Starch Glucose Section 2-3 Figure 2-13 A Starch
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Lipids
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General structureAlanineSerine Section 2-3 Amino groupCarboxyl group Figure 2-16 Amino Acids
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Amino acids Figure 2-17 A Protein
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Nucleic acids
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