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Published byThomasine Chapman Modified over 9 years ago
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Chemistry For Life Matter - occupies space and has mass Elements - C,H,O,N,S,Fe,Ca,Na,Cl,K; make up matter and can’t be decomposed by ordinary chemical means Atoms Protons Neutrons Electrons
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location weight charge Protons - nucleus 1 + Neutrons - nucleus 1 none Electrons - orbit 0 -
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Atomic number - number of protons Atomic weight - protons + neutrons Ions - cations (+ ions that have lost an electron), anions (- ions that have gained an electron)
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Isotope - same atomic number, different atomic weight - thus the number of neutrons differs Radioisotopes - break down and emit radiation that may be of clinical value
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Covalent - sharing of a pair of electrons
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Ionic - giving and taking electrons
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Hydrogen - weak attraction between the positive part of one polar molecule and the negative part of another polar molecule; provides stability to large molecules
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Atomic Combinations Molecules - stable combination of 2 or more elements Polar - electrons are unequally shared Nonpolar - electrons are equally shared Compounds - stable combination of 2 or more different kind of elements
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Synthesis - anabolism - building molecules Decomposition - catabolism - breaking molecules downDecomposition - Exchange - buffers Reversible - goes in both directions depending on the conditions Oxy-Redox - leo the lion goes ger
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Factors Influencing Reactions Temperature - rises increase speed of reactions to a point and vice versa Concentration - same as temp. Particle size - smaller ones act faster Catalysts - speed up reactions
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Kinetic energy (being used) and potential energy (being stored) Chemical - in bonds Mechanical - muscles moving body Radiant - heat or light Electrical - flow of electrons in nerve impulses
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Inorganic Compounds Lack carbons bonded to hydrogens Water - 60-80% of our weight Acids - release H ions when dissociating in water; tastes sour Bases - release OH ions when dissociating in water; tastes bitter
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pH - a measure of how acidic or basic a substance is. It runs from 0, which is most acidic, to 14, which is most basic. 7 is neutral. Buffers - maintain the pH of a particular region by forming weaker acids or bases Salts - dissociates into cations and anions, which are not H or OH ions, when in water
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Organic Compounds Compounds containing carbon bonded to hydrogen and oxygen
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C, H, O Monosaccharides Glucose - blood sugar Fructose - the sweetest sugar Ribose - part of RNA Disaccharides Lactose - milk sugar
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Sucrose - table sugar Maltose - in beer Polysaccharides Starch - our most abundant dietary carbohydrate Glycogen - our stored carbohydrate in our muscle and our liver Cellulose - a fiber that keeps us regular
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C, H, O Fats and oils - glycerol + 3 fatty acids, a triglyceride; SFA, MUFA, PUFA Eicosanoids such as prostaglandins which influence the cells that produce them Phospholipids - build cell membranes Sterols - cholesterol, sex hormones Vitamins - A, D, E, K
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C, H, O, N Amino acids - amino, carboxyl, hydrogen and radical around a C; they bind by peptide bonds to make polypeptides peptide Enzymes are all proteins – they catalyze reactions and often require coenzymes (vitamins or minerals); work like a lock and key
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Other Organic Compounds Nucleic acids - DNA, RNA
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ATP Structure
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ATP - the energy compound Cyclic AMP - involved in hormone and neurotransmitter action
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