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Ch: 2 The Chemistry of Life 1
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2-1 The Nature of Matter Atom – the basic unit of all matter Means “unable to be cut” Made up of a nucleus and electrons Nucleus – center of the atom Protons – positively charged particle Neutron – no charge Electrons – negatively charged particle Element – one type of atom Isotopes – atoms of the same element that have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons. 2
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Compound – a combination of 2 or more elements Ionic bond – the transferring of electrons from one atom to another Ion – a positively or negatively charged atom due to chemical bonding. Covalent bond – when electrons are shared between atoms 3 2-1 The Nature of Matter
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Water is a polar molecule. Polarity – A molecule in which the charges are unevenly distributed. Polar molecules take on a bent shape. Polar molecules are attracted to other polar molecules and form hydrogen bonds between one another. 4 2-2 Properties of Water – the most abundant compound in living things
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Cohesion – an attraction between molecules of the same substance. Adhesion – an attraction between molecules of different substances. Water has a high specific heat capacity - takes a large amount of heat to raise the temperature. Capillary action – the ability to move upward against gravity. Due to the combined properties of adhesion and cohesion. 5
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Surface tension – because water is polar and bonds with other water molecules it creates hydrogen bonds that create a small amount of tension on the surface. Mixture – A material composed of 2 or more elements or compounds that are physically mixed together but not chemically. Solution – a mixture of 2 or more substances in which the molecules are evenly distributed 6 2-2 Properties of Water
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Solute – substances that get dissolved in a solution. Solvent – the substance in which the solute dissolves in; it does the dissolving. Suspension – A mixture of water and non-dissolved materials. Like Italian salad dressing. 7 2-2 Properties of Water
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2-3 Carbon Compounds 8 Carbon will: Form four covalent bonds Bond with itself forming straight chains, branched chains, or rings Form single, double and triple bonds.
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9 2-3 Carbon Compounds Methane AcetyleneButadieneBenzeneIsooctane Question: How many pairs of electrons do the carbon atoms share in acetylene?
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Macromolecules – Giant Molecules Polymerization – process of making macromolecules -small compounds are connected to make a large one monomer – small unit that can join to form polymers AKA building blocks polymer – large molecule that results from the joining of monomers 10 2-3 Carbon Compounds
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Major Polymers and their common names - Carbohydrates – sugar and starches Lipids – fats, oils, cholesterol and waxes Nucleic Acids – DNA and RNA Proteins - Meats, enzyme, muscle 11
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Carbohydrates - sugars and starches Consist of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms usually in a ratio of 1: 2: 1 (CHO) Major Functions Main source of energy in living things Also used for structural purposes in plants and some animals (cellulose). Building Block/ Monomer is the simple sugar or monosaccharide 12
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Same formula (C 6 H 12 0 6 ), different arrangement – also known as Isomers Glucose main sugar burned for energy Fructose – fruit sugar Galactose found in milk Types of monosaccharide's 13
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Disaccharides = two Monosaccharides chemical formula (C 12 H 22 O 11 ) Sucrose – table sugar Maltose – malt sugar Lactose – milk sugar Polysaccharides –many monosaccharides Glycogen – glucose storage in animals Starch – plants storage of glucose Cellulose – found in cell wall of plants - strength and rigidity 14
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Lipids - fats, oils, waxes and steroids long chains of C, H, O atoms --with no set ratio Fatty acid chain and glycerol Major Functions Long term storage Insulation and Cushioning Main component in the cell membrane Chemical Messenger - steroids Waterproofing 15
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Triglycerides – 3 fatty acid chains bound to a glycerol moleculeTriglycerides 1Glycerol+ 3 Fatty Acids 1Triglyceride 16
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Saturated – Max # of H-bonds. Solid at room temp. No double bonds Unsaturated – Less than max # of H- bonds. Liquid at room temp Monounsaturated – one double bond Polyunsaturated – more than one double bond 17
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Proteins Contain - C,H,O,N Affect rate of reactions – enzymes Structural component in muscle, bone and skin Help fight disease – antibodies Serve as cell markers and receptor sites Transport materials into and out of the cell 18
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Building block/Monomer – amino acid Typical amino acid central carbon amino group –( NH2) carboxyl group – (COOH) R group- varies with amino acid (20 different ones) Proteins 19
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Types Dipeptide: 2 amino acids Polypeptide: 3 – 100 amino acids Protein: 100 – 1000 amino acids in length All connected by peptide bonds. Proteins 20
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Nucleic Acids Contain C,H,O,N,P Store and transmit hereditary or genetic information Essential in the manufacture of proteins Building block/monomer - nucleotide Nucleotides 5 carbon sugar phosphate group nitrogenous base Types DNA –deoxyribonucleicacid RNA – ribonucleic acid 21
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Biochemical Reactions Dehydration Synthesis – anabolism - polymers are formed – releases water monomer + monomer polymer + water Example: monosaccharide + monosaccharide disaccharide + water Hydrolysis - catabolism – large molecules (polymers) broken into simpler ones (monomers) – takes in water polymer + water monomer + monomer Example disaccharide + water monosaccharide + monosaccharide 22
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Add H 2 O Separate polymer into: 2 monomers Remove Water Two Monomers Bond= polymer 23
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2-4 Chemical Reactions and Enzymes Chemical Reactions – changes one set of chemicals into another set of chemicals Reactants – Chemicals getting changed Products - produced by a chemical reaction Reactants Products CO 2 + H 2 O H 2 CO 3 Energy in Reactions Bonds broken = energy released Bonds Formed = energy absorbed 24
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Exergonic Reactions - release energy = spontaneous Endergonic Reactions – absorb energy = need another source of energy Activation Energy – the energy needed to get a reaction started Energy-Absorbing Reaction Energy-Releasing Reaction Products Activation energy Activation energy Reactants Endergonic ReactionExergonic Reaction 25
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Enzymes – proteins - speeds up chemical reactions in living things Catalyst (enzyme) – something that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction by lowering the activation energy. Catalase – enzyme that breaks down hydrogen peroxide Enzyme specificity - each enzyme catalyzes only one reaction “like a lock and key” 26
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Enzyme Action Reactants have to collide with enough energy to break bonds and form new ones. Enzymes provide a site where reactants can be brought together to react. Such a site reduces the energy needed for reaction. The Enzyme-Substrate Complex - Enzymes hold the substrates (reactants) to allow them to react with a lower activation energy. - A substrate binds to an enzyme at its active site 27
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