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CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

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CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life. Why is chemistry important in the study of biology?. Chemicals make up ALL matter – living and nonliving. All life processes are chemical reactions . Chemical signals between cells regulate metabolism enzymes, hormones - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

CP Biology Chapter 2The Chemistry of Life

Page 2: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Chemicals make up ALL matter – living and nonliving.• All life processes are chemical reactions.• Chemical signals between cells regulate

metabolism– enzymes, hormones

• Chemical signals in the environment– Attract a mate; attract pollinators– Scare away predators– Find food

Why is chemistry important in the study of biology?

Page 3: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

ELEMENTS, ATOMS, AND MOLECULES

There are 92 naturally occurring elements–Only 4 make up most of the human body–CARBON–HYDROGEN (C H O N)- OXYGEN- NITROGEN

Page 4: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Elements of Living Cells

Major elements

Minor elements

Page 5: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Forming Compounds

Two or more elements combined in a fixed ratioIONIC BONDING

Page 6: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

LE 2-3

Sodium Chlorine Sodium Chloride

Na

Metal, soft

Highly reactive

Cl

Gas

toxic

Salt

Crystal

Common, edible

Two or more elements in a FIXED RATIO

COMPOUNDS

Elements can combine to form compounds

Page 7: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Ions = charged particles

Page 8: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

LE 2-7b

Na+

Cl-

NaCl is ionic - “crystal lattice” structure

Page 9: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Ionic Compound – “crystal lattice”

Attraction of opposite charges- ordered, fixed structure

Page 10: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Ionic Compouonds transfer electrons

Both atoms now have filled valence, but no longer

electrically neutral

Page 11: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Ionic – attraction of opposite charges• Ionic bonds dissociate in water

Page 12: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Covalent Bonding• Atoms SHARE valence electrons

– One bond = one shared pair (one from each atom)

Page 13: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Covalent bonds form “molecules

Page 14: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Double bond = two shared pairs (two from each atom)

Page 15: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Intramolecular v Intermolecular forces

Page 16: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

CHEMICAL REACTIONS

Reactants Products•Chemical bonds break in reactants•atoms rearrange •New chemical bonds form•The number of atoms stays constant on

both sides of the equation Na+ + Cl- NaCl

2 H2 + O2 2 H2O

Page 17: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

What is an isotope?Isotopes are atoms with the same atomic number but different masses

• different number of neutrons

• Behave the same way chemically!!

• Most elements have at least one isotope

Page 18: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Isotopes of Carbon

Isotopes of the same element have the same number of PROTONS and the same number of ELECTRONS.

- have the same chemical behaviors

Page 19: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Radioactive Isotopes

Have unstable nuclei

• Emit atomic particles as the “decay”

• Become a stable atom of a different element

Page 20: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Radioactive isotopes

• Also emit radiation• at a steady rate, called “half-life”

– Half-life: time for ½ of a sample to decay– Ex. Half-life of C-14 is 5700 years

• Can use radiation for many purposes

Page 21: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

DATE FOSSILS

Carbon-14 and other isotopes • measure amount of C-14 present in a

fossil• compare to amount of present when it

died• tells us how old the fossil is

Page 22: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Carbon Dating FossilsC14 in

atmosphereC14 in carbon

dioxide

CO2 used by plants in

photosynthesis

Some C14 absorbed in

ocean

Some in animals after eating plants

When animals die, no more C14

taken in

Page 23: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Use as “tags” or “tracers”

• Same chemical properties as stable isotopes• Used the same in life processes• Can show how atoms and molecules are used in

living things– Carbon-14

• showed how plants make food from CO2

– Radioactive sulfur and phosphorus• showed how viruses enter cells

Page 24: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

PET Scan - MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS

PET scan = Positron Emission Tomography• Radioisotope into blood collects in tissues• Amount of radiation shows organ function

- more active cells use more food and energy (ex. cancer cells)

- more active cells emit more radiation- ”hot spot”

Page 25: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Brain scan using radioisotope

Page 26: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

A body scan showing areas of increased radiation (increased cell activity)

Increased radiation shows abnormal function

Page 27: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Thyroid scans – tumors?

A thyroid scan showing a “hot spot”

Scan showing increased uptake in thyroid gland

Page 28: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

PET scans show functionCAT scans show structure

Page 29: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Radiation Therapy – treats cancer External therapy• beam of radiation aimed at tumor• from radioisotope, or from therapy X-ray

machine

Page 30: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Internal Therapy - Radioisotopes kill cancer cells

Tiny “seeds” put into tumor Injected into blood –

goes to specific organ

Page 31: CP Biology Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life

Uses in Industry• Nuclear energy• Sterilize surgery instruments• Kill bacteria in food• Long-life batteries