2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

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Objectives for this week… Generate an empirically evidenced and logical argument. Distinguish a scientific argument from a non-scientific argument. Recognize methods of inquiry that lead to scientific knowledge. List features that distinguish living organisms from nonliving matter. Explain what is meant by the term diversity, and speculate about what caused the great diversity of life forms on Earth. List as many steps of the scientific approach to understanding a problem as you can. Know the various types of chemical bonds, the circumstances under which each forms, and the relative strength of each type Understand the essential chemistry of water, the relationships of acids, bases, and salts.

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Page 1: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Objectives for this week… Generate an empirically evidenced and logical argument. Distinguish a scientific argument from a non-scientific argument. Recognize methods of inquiry that lead to scientific knowledge. List features that distinguish living organisms from nonliving matter. Explain what is meant by the term diversity, and speculate about

what caused the great diversity of life forms on Earth. List as many steps of the scientific approach to understanding a

problem as you can. Know the various types of chemical bonds, the

circumstances under which each forms, and the relative strength of each type

Understand the essential chemistry of water, the relationships of acids, bases, and salts.

Page 2: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry
Page 3: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Why do we need to learn about Chemistry?

Chapter 2Basic Chemistry

Chemistry: “The study of matter & the changes it

undergoes.”-Chang, R. (2007). Chemistry. 9th ed.

McGrawHill: New York

Page 4: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Life is made of chemica

ls!

Page 5: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Why Chemistry?

Life uses

chemical

reactions!

Page 6: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Why Chemistry? Life uses

chemical

reactions!

Page 7: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

What are we going to talk about today?

Chemical elementsCompounds and moleculesChemistry of waterAcids and bases

Page 8: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Protons

Electrons

Neutrons

Chemical Elements• Matter: anything that takes up space and

has mass (solids, liquids, gases)

• All matter is made of elements: cannot be broken down

OxygenAn

element!

++

+

++ +

++

--

--

-

--

-

Atom: smallest unit of an element

WaterNot an

element!

Hydrogen

John Dalton

Page 9: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical Elements

CHNOPS = 95% body weight of organisms

Page 10: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical ElementsHelium

Page 11: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Electrons are attracted to the positively charged nucleus

Chemical Elements

(-)(+)

Most stable

Less stable

Valence shell: Outer electron shell

Valence electrons: # of electrons in valence shell

Octet rule: outer shell is most stable with 8 electrons

Page 12: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical Elements

• Isotopes– Same # of protons

and electrons– Different # of

neutrons

• Ions– Different # of

electrons– Have charges,

instead of being neutral

Na Na+

Page 13: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical Elements• Way to organize the

elements• Groups - similar

characteristics– Same valence

electrons

• Periods – same # valence shells

• Atomic mass– Average mass for all

the isotopes– Slightly different

than mass number

Periodic Table

Page 14: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical Elements

Handwritten

Periodic Table

Which isotope you are talking about

Average mass of all isotopes

Page 15: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical Elements

C612 C6

13 C614

Carbon Isotopes – How many neutrons?

6 7 8

Unstable – radioactive!

Page 16: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemical Elements

• Radioactivity - releases energy (as well as other particles)

• Radioactive isotopes can be used as medical tracers (low levels)

• High levels can be used to kill bacteria and cancer

Page 17: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

What are we going to talk about today?

Chemical elementsCompounds and moleculesChemistry of waterAcids and bases

Page 18: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Compounds and Molecules• Compound vs.

molecule• Compound 2

different elements• Molecule has same

elements• In Biology,

everything is a molecule!

http://dl.clackamas.edu/ch104-03/molecule.htm

Water

Molecular Oxygen

Page 19: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Compounds and Molecules• Ionic Bonding– Transfer of electrons

from one atom to another

– Causes (+) and (-) charged ions

– Attracted to each other

– Salts: solid substances that usually separate and exist as individual ions in water

Page 20: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Compounds and Molecules• Covalent Bonding– Two atoms share

electrons to fill outer electron shell

– Single, double, triple bonds

– Non-polar covalent bond = equal electron sharing

– Polar covalent bond = unequal electron sharing water!!

Page 21: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Which do you think is the strongest, ionic or covalent bonds?

Why?

Page 22: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

What are we going to talk about today?

Chemical elementsCompounds and moleculesChemistry of waterAcids and bases

Page 23: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of Water

Water (H2O) is polar

covalent

Oxygen is very electronegative

Hydrogen bonding between molecule

s

Page 24: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

The discovery of liquid water under the frozen surface of a distant moon in our solar system has caused scientists to speculate on the possibility of life on that moon. Researchers hold no hope of any life form existing on any planet

or moon in the absence of water. Why?

Page 25: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of Water

• Properties1. High heat capacity2. High heat of evaporation3. Solvent4. Cohesion & adhesion5. Frozen water is less dense than liquid

water

Page 26: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of WaterHigh Heat Capacity

Good for organisms that this occurs

slowly!

Page 27: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of WaterHigh Heat of Evaporation

Page 28: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of WaterWater is a Solvent • Universal solvent

• Hydrophilic – molecules that can attract water (ions, polar molecules)

• Hydrophobic – molecules that cannot attract water (nonpolar molecules, neutral atoms)

Page 29: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of WaterCohesion & Adhesion

Page 30: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Chemistry of WaterFrozen water is less dense than

liquid water

Page 31: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review: Chemistry of Water

• Polar covalent bond within the molecule

• Hydrogen bonds between molecules

• 5 Properties1. High specific heat2. High heat of

vaporization3. Is a solvent4. Cohesion and

adhesion5. Frozen water is

less dense than water

Page 32: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

What are we going to talk about today?

Chemical elementsCompounds and moleculesChemistry of waterAcids and bases

Page 33: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Acids and Bases

When water dissociates (ionizes) equal # of

hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions

Only a few at a time do this

Page 34: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Acids and Bases

Acids• Dissociate in water

releasing H+

• Strong acid almost completely dissociates

HCl H+ + Cl-

Bases• Uptake H+ or

release OH- • Strong base almost

completely dissociates

NaOH Na+ + OH-

How do we

measure this?

Page 35: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Acids and Bases

• pH scale: measurement scale for hydrogen ion concentration

• >7 basic• <7 acidic• =7 neutral• Log scale

– each increase in number = 10X increase

100X more acidic than

water

10,000,000X more acidic than

water

Page 36: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Acids and Bases

• Buffers: chemical or combination of chemicals that keep pH within normal limits– Blood pH needs to

stay about 7.4– At 7, acidosis– At 7.8, alkalosis

H2CO3 H+ HCO3-

dissociates

re-forms

Page 37: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Acids and Bases• Acid precipitation (deposition) has a pH

<5• Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides from

fossil fuel emissions such as coal, oil, and gasoline

• Lakes, forests, structures

Page 38: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

What are we going to talk about today?

Chemical elementsCompounds and moleculesChemistry of waterAcids and bases

Any Questions?

Page 39: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review Questions

About 25 of the 92 natural elements are known to be essential to life. Which four of these 25 elements make up approximately 96% of living matter? A) carbon, sodium, chlorine, nitrogen B) carbon, sulfur, phosphorus, hydrogen C) oxygen, hydrogen, calcium, sodium D) carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen E) carbon, oxygen, sulfur, calcium

Page 40: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review Questions

How do isotopes of the same element differ from each other? A) number of protons B) number of electrons C) number of neutrons D) valence electron distribution E) amount of radioactivity

Page 41: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review Questions

A covalent chemical bond is one in which

A) electrons are transferred from one atom and to another atom so that the two atoms become oppositely charged. B) protons and neutrons are shared by two atoms. C) outer-shell electrons of two atoms are shared. D) outer-shell electrons of one atom are transferred to the inner electron shells of another atom. E) the inner-shell electrons of one atom are transferred to the outer shell of another atom.

Page 42: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review Questions

N715

Protons = Neutron = Electrons =

787

Atomic Number

Mass Number

Page 43: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review Questions

Ca2+

Protons = Neutron = Electrons =

202018

Page 44: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Review Questions

Atomic Mass

Atomic Number

Atomic Symbol

Page 45: 2013 s bio 101 chapter 2 basic chemistry

Resources

• Bombardier beetle– http://www.pnas.org/content/96/17/9705.full

• History of the Atom – http://

www.chemheritage.org/discover/chemistry-in-history/themes/index.aspx