the chemistry of living things. an introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

21
The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures.

Upload: cori-goodman

Post on 11-Jan-2016

228 views

Category:

Documents


8 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to

atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures.

Page 2: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

What do you remember about atoms? Do you remember what the building

blocks of atoms are? How is the atom of one element different

from another? How do we organize all of the different

elements?

Page 3: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Beyond cellular biology We learned about the building blocks of life, the

cell, earlier in the year. In our last unit we saw how cells joined together

to form large and complex organisms. Now we will learn about the building blocks of

cells as well as all matter in the universe. Atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter.

Page 4: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

What’s the matter? Matter can be defined as anything that has

mass and takes up space. On earth, the three phases of matter are

solids, liquids and gases. In stars there exists a fourth phase of

matter called plasma. Plasma is super-heated ionized gas which

exists on earth only as lightning.*

Page 5: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Plasma on EarthIn addition to lightning

there are also plasma lasers and the northern lights.

Even neon lights are an example of plasma.

Page 6: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

The Atom Atoms are made up of 3 subatomic

particles found within the two regions of the cell.

The particles are protons, neutrons and electrons.

Protons and neutrons are found inside the nucleus of the atom, and electrons are found in the area surrounding the nucleus.

Page 7: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Image of Atom

Page 8: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Subatomic particles The subatomic particles have two very

important characteristics that we must memorize, and that is mass and charge.

Subatomic particle Mass Charge

Proton 1 +1

Neutron 1 0

Electron 0 -1

Page 9: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

The nucleus The nucleus of the atom contains all of the

protons and neutrons. It makes up virtually all of the mass of the

atom and has a net positive charge. The nucleus of an atom is much, much,

smaller than the nucleus of a cell. Relative scale of cell and atom

Page 10: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

The electrons The electrons orbit the nucleus in distinct

energy levels or shells. The first energy level, which is closest to

the nucleus, can contain a maximum of 2 electrons before it is filled.

Each energy level after that if further away from the nucleus and can contain up to 8 electrons.*

Page 11: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Electron energy levels

Page 12: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Elements Atoms differ in the number of protons,

neutrons and electrons they possess. The number of protons in the nucleus is

referred to as it’s atomic number. An element refers to all atoms that have

the same atomic number. Eg. All atoms of the element carbon have 6

protons in their nucleus.

Page 13: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

The Periodic table. All the known

elements are arranged in order of increasing atomic number on the periodic table of elements.

Page 14: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Atomic Symbols. All of the elements are referred to by a symbol. The symbol consists of either one or two letters. For symbols using one letter, it is capitalized. (eg.

Carbon = C) For symbols using to letters, the first letter is

capitalized and the second is not. (eg. Chlorine = Cl)

Page 15: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

The important elements of life. All life on earth is made up mostly of just

four elements. Carbon ( C ), Oxygen ( O ), Hydrogen ( H )

and Nitrogen ( N ). The next two most common elements are

Sulfur ( S ) and Phosphorous ( P ) and are found in much lower amounts.

Page 16: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Special musical guests..they might be giants. The elements

Page 17: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Mass number. Atomic number refers to the

number of protons in the nucleus of an atom.

Mass number refers to the number of protons plus the number of neutrons found in the nucleus of an atom.

If you subtract atomic # from mass # you get the number of neutrons.

Atomic #

Mass #

Page 18: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Pure substances. An atom is the smallest unit of an element that

still possesses the properties of that element. Because of this, elements are considered to be

pure substances. Every atom of gold is identical to every other

atom of gold in the universe. Compounds are also considered to be pure

substances.

Page 19: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Compounds. a substance formed by the chemical union of

two or more elements or ingredients in definite proportion by weight.

An example would be water. Each molecule of water contains two atoms of

hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. (H2O) Every molecule of water is identical to every

other molecule of water in the universe.

Page 20: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

What is a molecule? A group of two or more atoms linked together

by sharing electrons in a chemical bond. The atoms can be different as in the case of

water. (We have two H and one O). The atoms can be of the same element, as is

the case of the gas ozone (O3). The atoms in a compound can only be

separated by chemical means.

Page 21: The Chemistry of Living Things. An introduction to atoms, elements, compounds and mixtures

Mixtures. Mixtures are composed of one or more

substances that are not chemically combined, and can be separated.

Salt dissolved in water and chocolate chip cookies are examples of mixtures.

Mixtures are not pure substances since the ratio of the substances which make them up are not always identical to each other.

All the chocolate chip cookies in the world do not have the same number of chips as every other one.

or more substances that are not chemically combined with each other and are capable of being separated.A composition of two or more substances that are not chemically combined with each other and are capable of being separated.