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Adjust seating arrangement

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To assess knowledge gained in chapter 2 test and begin ... Grapefruit juice. Tomato juice. Urine. PURE WATER. Seawater. Milk of magnesia. Household ammonia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adjust seating arrangement


1
Class Topics
Title Biology 9/27/07
Objectives
  • To assess knowledge gained in chapter 2 test and
    begin learning about biochemistry
  • Adjust seating arrangement
  • Chapter 2 test
  • There will be no potty breaks after the test
    PLAN ACCORDINGLY!
  • Begin biochemistry!!!!!
  • water
  • If you make people think theyre thinking,
    theyll love you but if you really make them
    think, theyll hate you.
  • Don Marquis

Handouts
Friday, November 06, 2009 727 AM
2
Class Assignments
By When
What
  • Chapter 2 Test 9/27/07
  • Binder Check 10/1/07
  • All Chapter 2 homework corrections 10/1/07
  • Read 49-51 10/1/07
  • Due this class period
  • Due next class period
  • Due in the future

3
Move Desks
  • Gather your materials in preparation to move to a
    new desk

4
Posttest activities
  • Hand in the test in the appropriate tray
  • Choose from the following
  • Read 49-51
  • Correct homework
  • Read 49-51
  • Read 49-51

5
  • Water
  • oxygen exerts a stronger pull on the shared
    electrons than hydrogen
  • oxygen end
  • slightly negative
  • hydrogen end
  • slightly positively
  • Water is therefore a polar molecule

6
Nonpolar molecules
  • No unequal sharing
  • Do not dissolve in water
  • Oils and fats

7
Characteristics
  • Opposite charges attract
  • This attraction forms hydrogen bonds
  • Occurs with water and other molecules

Hydrogen bond
Figure 2.10A
8
  • water exists in nature in all three physical
    states
  • solid
  • liquid
  • a gas

Figure 2.10B
9
  • Water in three different states

Figure 2.10Bx
10
Four Properties of Water
  • Cohesion/Adhesion
  • Ability to Stabilize Temperature
  • Expansion Upon Freezing
  • Versatility as a Solvent
  • Video Clip The Shape of Water

11
Cohesion
  • Cohesion
  • Water molecules Stick together
  • Water moves from a plants roots to its leaves
  • surface tension
  • Insects can walk on water
  • Belly Flop!

Figure 2.11
12
Temperature moderation
  • It takes a lot of energy to disrupt hydrogen
    bonds
  • water is able to absorb a great deal of heat
    energy
  • Small increase in temperature
  • As water cools, a slight drop in temperature
    releases a large amount of heat

13
  • A water molecule takes a large amount of energy
    with it when it evaporates
  • This leads to evaporative cooling

14
Expansion upon freezing
  • Ice is less dense than liquid water
  • causes it to float
  • What if ice sank?
  • it would seldom have a chance to thaw
  • Ponds, lakes, and oceans would eventually freeze
    solid
  • Killing all living things

15
  • Water, molecular model

Ice, molecular model
16
Ice is less dense than liquid water
  • Molecules in ice are farther apart than those in
    liquid water

Hydrogen bond
ICE Hydrogen bonds are stable
LIQUID WATER Hydrogen bonds constantly break and
re-form
Figure 2.13
17
  • Ice fishing

Figure 2.13x1
18
Universal solvent
  • Solutes whose charges or polarity allow them to
    stick to water molecules dissolve in water
  • They form aqueous solutions

Na


Na


Cl
Cl





Ions in solution
Salt crystal
Figure 2.14
19
Review
  • A compound that releases H ions in solution is
    an acid, and one that accepts H ions in solution
    is a base
  • Acidity is measured on the pH scale
  • 0-7 is acidic
  • 8-14 is basic
  • Pure water and solutions that are neither basic
    nor acidic are neutral, with a pH of 7

20
pH scale
  • The pH scale

H
OH
Lemon juice gastric juice
Increasingly ACIDIC (Higher concentration of H)
Grapefruit juice
Acidic solution
Tomato juice
Urine
NEUTRAL H OH
PURE WATER
Human blood
Seawater
Neutral solution
Increasingly BASIC (Lower concentration of H)
Milk of magnesia
Household ammonia
Household bleach
Oven cleaner
Basic solution
Figure 2.15
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