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Life’s Chemical Basis Chapter 2

Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

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Page 1: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Life’s Chemical Basis

Chapter 2

Page 2: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Why are we studying chemistry?

Chemistry is the foundation of biology

Page 3: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Atoms

Determine the behavior of elementsmake up all living things

Building blocks of all substancesprotons, neutrons, electrons

Chargeelectrical property

attracts or repels other subatomic particles

Page 4: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Subatomic Particles

Electronsnegative chargemove around the nucleus

Protonspositive chargein the nucleus

Neutronsno chargein the nucleus

Page 5: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Characteristics of Atoms

Atoms differ in the # of subatomic particles:

Atomic Numbernumber of protons

determines the element

Mass Numbernumber of protons and neutrons

determines isotopes

Page 6: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Matter

Proton Neutron Electron

Hydrogen1 proton1 electron

Oxygen8 protons8 neutrons8 electrons

+ 0 –

Everything is made of matter

Matter is made of atoms

Page 7: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

The World of Elements

Page 8: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Periodic Table

An arrangement of the elements based on their atomic number and chemical properties

Page 9: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Essential Elements of Life

~25 elements are essential to life

4 make up 96% of living matterCarbon

Hydrogen

Oxygen

Nitrogen

4 make up almost the rest

Phosporus

Sulfur

Calcium

Potassium

Page 10: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Bonding Properties

Electrons Determine the chemical behavior of an atom

Depends on # of valence e- (outer shell)

How does this atom behave?

Page 11: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Bonding Properties

How does this atom behave? How does this atom behave?

Page 12: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Why Atoms Interact

The shell model of electron orbitals diagrams electron vacancies; filled from inside outFirst shell: one orbital (2 electrons)

Second shell: four orbitals (8 electrons)

Third shell: four orbitals (8 electrons)

Atoms with vacancies in their outer shell tend to give up, acquire, or share electrons

Page 13: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Elements & Their Valence Shells

Elements in the same row have the same number of shells

Moving from left to right, each element has a sequential addition of electrons (& protons)

Page 14: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Elements & Their Valence Shells

Elements in the same column have the same valence & similar

chemical properties

Page 15: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Atoms & Ions

IonAn atom with a positive or negative charge due

to loss or gain of electrons in its outer shell

Examples: Na+, Cl-

ElectronegativityA measure of an atom’s ability to pull electrons

from another atom

Page 16: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly
Page 17: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Chemical Reactivity

Atoms tend to either:1. Complete a partially filled valence shell

-or-

1. Empty a partially filled valence shell

This tendency drives chemical reactions…

and creates bonds

Page 18: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

From Atoms to Molecules

Weak bonds:Hydrogen bonds Attraction b/w + and –

Van der Waals forcesAttraction b/w hot spots

of + and – due to asymmetrical electron distribution

Ionic bondsAttraction b/w anion and

cation

Page 19: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Ionic Bonds

A strong mutual attraction between two oppositely charges ions with a large difference in electronegativity (an electron is not transferred)

Example: NaCl (table salt)

Page 20: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly
Page 21: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Covalent Bonds

Strong bonds2 atoms share 1, 2, or 3 pairs of electrons

Very stable

Form molecules

H2 (hydrogen gas)

H — H

H

H

OH

HO

Page 22: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Multiple Covalent Bonds

2 atoms can share >1 pair of electronsDouble bonds2 pairs of e-

Triple bonds3 pairs of e-

VERY strong bonds

More isbetter!

Page 23: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Nonpolar Covalent Bond

Pair of electrons shared equally by 2 atomsEx: methane (CH4)

balanced, stable,good building block

Page 24: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Polar Covalent Bond

Pair of electrons shared unequally by 2 atomsEx: water (H2O)Oxygen has a stronger

attraction to the e-

More electronegative

Water is a polar molecule+ vs – poles

leads to many interesting properties of water

H

H

Oxygen

Page 25: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Hydrogen Bonds

Polar water creates molecular attractionsAttraction b/w one +H of

one molecule and one –O of another molecule

Remember, it is a weak bond

Stabilize the structures of large biological molecules

Page 26: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly
Page 27: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Chemical Reactions

Make and break chemical bonds

ReactantsStarting molecules

ProductsFinal molecules

Ex: 6 CO2 + 6 H20 → C6H12O6 + 6 O2

Page 28: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Why Are We Studying Water?

All life occurs in waterInside and outside the cell

Page 29: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Chemistry of Water

H2O is a polar moleculePolar covalent bonds

+ and - poles

Page 30: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Chemistry of Water

Hydrogen bondsform between 2 H2O molecules

+ attracted to –

Sticky molecule

Page 31: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

4 Properties of Water

Facilitate an environment for life:Cohesive behavior

Ability to moderate temperature

Expansion upon freezing

Versatility as a solvent

Page 32: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Cohesion

Created by H-bonding between H2O moleculesH2O is “sticky”

Surface tension

Page 33: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Adhesion

H2O molecules form bonds with other substancesCapillary action

Meniscus

H2O climbs up

fiberEx: paper towel

Page 34: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Transpiration

How water gets to the top of a tree

Page 35: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Moderation of Temperature

H2O resists changes in temp.High specific heat

Takes a lot to heat it up

Takes a lot to cool it down

H2O moderates temperatures on Earth

Page 36: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Heat of Vaporization

Page 37: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Evaporative Cooling

Organisms rely on heat of vaporization to remove heat

Page 38: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

The Special Case of Ice

Most (all?) substances are more dense when they are solid, but not water…

Ice floats!!!H-bonds form a crystal

And this hasmade all the difference!

Page 39: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Ice Floats

Page 40: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Why is “ice floats” important?

Oceans & lakes don’t freeze solidSurface ice insulates water belowAllows life to survive the winterIf ice sank…Ponds, lakes, & oceans would freeze solidIn summer, only a few inches would thawSeasonal turnover of lakesnutrient cycling

Page 41: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Water is the Solvent of Life

SolventThe dissolving agent

SoluteThe substance that is

dissolved

SolutionA liquid that is a

homogenous mixture of substances

Page 42: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Water is the Solvent of Life

Polarity makes H2O a good solventPolar H2O molecules surround + and – ions

Page 43: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

What Dissolves in Water?

Hydrophilic moleculesSubstances have an attraction to H2O

Polar or nonpolar?

Page 44: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

What Doesn’t Dissolve in H2O?

Hydrophobic substancesDon’t have an affinity for H2O

Polar or nonpolar? Oh, lookhydrocarbons!

fat (triglycerol)

Page 45: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Ionization of Water and pH

Water ionizesH+ splits off from H2O, leaving OH–if [H+] = [-OH], water is neutral

if [H+] > [-OH], water is acidic

if [H+] < [-OH], water is basic

pH scalehow acid or basic solution is

1 7 14

H2O H+ + OH–

Page 46: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

tenfold changein H+ ions

pH1 pH210-1 10-2

10 times less H+

pH8 pH710-8 10-7

10 times more H+

pH10 pH810-10 10-8

100 times more H+

Page 47: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Buffers & Cellular Regulation

pH of cells must be kept ~7pH affects shape of molecules

shape of molecules affect function

pH affects cellular function

Control pH by buffersreservoir of H+donate H+ when

[H+] falls

absorb H+ when [H+] rises

100

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

3Amount of base added

Bufferingrange

4 52

pH

Page 48: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Review!!

1. Many mammals control their body temperature by sweating. Which property of water is most directly responsible for the ability of sweat to lower body temperature?

a) Water’s change in density when it condenses

b) Water’s ability to dissolve molecules in the air

c) The release of heat by the formation of hydrogen bonds

d) The absorption of heat by the breaking of hydrogen bonds

e) Water’s high surface tension

Page 49: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

2. The following are pH values: cola-2; orange juice-3; beer-4; coffee-5; human blood-7.4. Which of these liquids has the highest molar concentration of OH-?

a) cola

b) orange juice

c) beer

d) coffee

e) human blood

Page 50: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

3. Based on your knowledge of the polarity of water, the solute molecule is most likely _____.

a) positively charged

b) negatively charged

c) neutral in charge

d) hydrophobic

e) nonpolar

Page 51: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

4. If the pH of a solution is increased from pH 8 to pH 9, it means that the

a) concentration of H+ is 10 times greater than what it was at pH 8.

b) concentration of H+ is 100 times less than what it was at pH 8.

c) concentration of OH- is 10 times greater than what it was at pH 8.

d) concentration of OH- is 100 times less than what it was at pH 8.

e) concentration of H+ is greater and the concentration of OH- is less than at pH 8.

Page 52: Life’s Chemical Basis - Weebly

Questions???