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Published byRuth Hancock Modified over 9 years ago
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The Chemical Basis of Life
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Matter—anything that has mass and takes up space Solid Liquid Gas
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Element—unit of matter than cannot be broken down further by ordinary chemical reactions 92 naturally occurring elements 96% of weight of any living thing is made up of 4 Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen
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Atom—smallest indivisible unit of an element Molecule—multiple atoms of the same element bonded together Compound—multiple atoms of different elements bonded together Na (sodium) + Cl (chlorine) = NaCl (sodium chloride Na is a metal Cl is a poisonous gas NaCl is table salt
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Three subatomic particles Nucleus Protons & Neutrons Center of atom Orbits Electrons Surround nucleus like planets around a sun ParticleChargeMassLocation Protons+11Nucleus Neutrons01Nucleus Electrons0Orbit
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Orbit in “shells” Valence shell—outermost orbit Octet Rule Atoms form bonds to have 8 electrons in the valence shell Atom either gains, loses, or shares electrons to adhere to octet rule
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Atomic Number=Protons Atomic Mass=Protons + Neutrons Number of electrons = number of protons In a stable atom in a natural state
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Elements in their natural state have neutral charge Positive charge (protons) equals negative charge (electrons)
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Example—Nitrogen Number of Protons? 7 (atomic number) Number of Neutrons? Atomic mass is 14 Atomic mass is Protons + Neutrons If protons are 7, put into formula…7+X=14…and solve for X Or…Atomic Mass minus Atomic Number = Neutrons 7 Number of Electrons? 7 (same as Protons)
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Change in the number of neutrons Does not affect charge Does not affect base element Isotopes are often unstable Carbon-12 ( 12 C) Basic elemental carbon Carbon-14 ( 14 C) Atomic Mass = 14 (6 Protons + 8 Neutrons) Used in dating ancient materials Radioisotopes in medical diagnosis
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Change in the number of electrons Affects electrical charge Anion—negative charge More electrons than protons Cl - (17 protons, 18 electrons) Cation—positive charge More protons than electrons Na + (11 protons, 10 electrons)
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Union between atoms Positive (protons) and negative (electrons) charges attract each other Similar charges repel (electrons & electrons)
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Atoms will not bond with other elements Valence shell already filled Non-reactive
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Will bond with other elements Valence shell not full Reactive
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Formed between ions Electrons transfer from one atom to another Opposite charges attract and hold atoms Na + + Cl - = NaCl Usually inorganic (acids, bases, salts, etc.) Weak bonds Dissolve in water
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Atoms share electrons Happens when both have room Stronger than ionic bonds Usually organic (proteins, carbohydrates, etc.) Nonpolar bond Share electrons equally
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Polar bond Atoms share electrons unevenly Electron spends more time around one atom than another Since electrons have a negative charge, one end (“pole”) has a slight negative charge, and one pole is slightly positive
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Bond between hydrogen atom of one polar compound and a different atom of another polar compound Positive charge on H attracted to negative charge on other compound Individually weak, but collectively strong. Important to many biological compounds
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Biologically important Makes up 70-90% of living things Unique properties Determined by hydrogen bonds
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Polar molecule (slight positive & negative charge) Hydrophilic— “Water loving” Polar compounds Hydrophobic— “Water hating” Nonpolar compounds Temperature stabilizing Large amounts of energy required to change temperature Keeps cell processes from generating too much heat Evaporation Ice helps insulate
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“Stick together” Cohesion—water sticks to itself Adhesion—water sticks to other polar molecules Due to polarity & hydrogen bonds “Universal solvent” Dissolves salts Dissolves other polar compounds
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pH scale 0-14 Based on H + concentration Greater H +, lower the pH Each unit is 10-fold change (logarithmic) going from pH 6 to 5 increases H + by 10 times
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Acids pH less than 7 Release H + into solution Bases pH greater than 7 Release OH - into solution Accepts H + from solution Neutrals pH 7.0
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Buffers Biological substances that help regulate pH Release or absorb H + to keep pH unchanged Resists pH changes Salts Formed when acids & bases combine NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H 2 0
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