Title: Life
1CHAPTER 2
2 Atoms
- Element- fundamental substance consisting of only
one type of atom. C, N, H, O are the most
commonly occurring elements in the human body. - There are 110 different elements, but only 92
naturally occurring ones. Numbers 93-110 are
very unstable and degrade quickly.
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4You try it - Name the elements
- Sodium
- Nickel
- Cesium
- mercury
5Vocabulary
- Matter anything that takes up space and has
mass - Subatomic particles electron, protons, neutrons
6Levels of Chemical Organization
- Subatomic particles
- Atom
- Molecules
7What Are Atoms?
- Smallest particles that retain properties of an
element - Made up of subatomic particles
- Protons ()
- Electrons (-)
- Neutrons (no charge)
- Note protons and neutrons themselves are now
known to consist of still smaller particles
called quarks.
8Structure of an Atom
- Nucleus
- Contains protons and neutrons
- Protons- subatomic particle with a small positive
charge () - Neutrons- subatomic particle with no charge (0)
9Structure of an Atom
10Structure of Atoms
electron
proton
neutron
Hydrogen
Helium
11Structure of an Atom
- Shells around the nucleus of an atom contain
electrons. - Electron- subatomic particle with a small
negative charge (-) - An atom usually
- contains equal
- numbers of protons
- and electrons. When
- it doesnt its called
- an ion.
12How to Read the Periodic Table
- See Appendix IV in back of textbook for good
periodic table. - Atomic Number- number of protons in a nucleus of
an atom. This defines which element the atom is.
Always the smaller number.
13Atomic Number Protons
- Symbol No
- O 8
- Ca 20
- Na 11
- Cl 17
- K 19
- Fe 26
- N 7
14How to Read a Periodic Table
- Mass Number- total number of protons and neutrons
in the atomic nucleus. The larger number. - Mass Number Number of protons Number of
neutrons - http//www.dayah.com/periodic
15You Try It!
- Symbol Protons Neutrons Mass
- O 8 8 16
- Ca 20 ? 40
- Na ? 12 23
- Cl 17 ? 35
- K ? 20 39
- Fe 26 30 ?
- N 7 ? 14
16 Putting Radioisotopes to work
- Isotope- atoms with different numbers of
neutrons. - Isotopes have different mass numbers
- Example
- Carbon 12 has 6 protons, 6 neutrons
- Carbon 14 has 6 protons, 8 neutrons
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18Vocabulary
- Radioisotopes an isotope that spontaneously
emits energy in the form of subatomic particles
and x-rays when its nucleus disintegrates - Radioactive decay isotopes that the nucleus is
disintegrating and transforming one element into
another spontaneously. (three types) - Half life the amount of time for ½ of the mass
of an radioactive isotope to break down
19Example
- Two isotopes of carbon
- Carbon 12 (12C)and Carbon 14 (14C)
-
- Carbon 14
- Half life -Decay time is 5700 yrs
- If you have 100 grams of Carbon 14
- after 5700 yrs you have 50 grams carbon 14 and
50 grams Nitrogen 13
20Decay example- The nucleus captures an electron
which basically turns a proton into a neutron.
Here's a diagram of electron capture with
beryllium-7
21Radioisotopes
- Have an unstable nucleus that emits energy and
particles - Radioactive decay transforms radioisotope into a
different element - Decay occurs at a fixed rate (half-life)
- Carbon-14 becomes N-14 at a specific rate
22Radioisotopes can be used in medicine, ecology,
botany and many other scientific fields.
- A tracer is a molecule in which a radioisotope
has been substituted for a more stable isotope
and can then be traced by the energy it
releases as it decays.
23Popcorn Chemistry
- When will each kernel pop?
- After it pops, can it even go back to being a
kernel? - What is released during the popping?
24- Like popcorn, there is no way to know which
radioisotope will degrade first! - Also like popcorn, once radioisotopes change,
they can never return to their previous state.
25- When radioisotopes degrade, energy is released.
- Machines that can see this energy can be used
to follow the path of the radioisotopes as they
travel through a system, each one releasing
energy as they degrade.
26Radioactive tracers can be used in
- PET scans
- Pharmaceutical research
- Metabolic studies
- X-rays
27Concentrations of radioactive tracer bound to
monoamine oxidase B (MAO B). Red shows the
highest concentration. Clearly, lower
concentrations are seen in the smoker. MAO B
helps regulate nerve function and blood pressure.
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29When atoms combine with atoms
- Atoms acquire, share, donate electrons.
- Whether one atom will bond with others depends on
the number and arrangement of its electrons. - The atoms of some elements do this quite easily
and other do not. - When an atom has one or more vacancies in
orbitals, it interacts with other atoms by
donating, accepting, or sharing electrons
(forming chemical bonds).
30Electrons
- Electrons occupy orbital's, or defined volumes of
space around an atoms nucleus. - Successive orbital's correspond to levels of
energy, which become higher with distance from
the atomic nucleus. - One or at most two electrons can occupy an
orbital. - The atoms with vacancies in orbitals at their
highest level tend to interact and form bonds
with one another.
31Vacancy vs. No vacancy
32Electron organization
- First shell-
- Lowest energy
- Holds up to 2
- electrons
- Second shell
- holds up to 8
- electrons
33A model atomic structure is a diagram with
successively larger circles, or shells, that keep
track of all electrons in the orbital at a given
energy level.
- Max number of electrons in each shell
- Shell Number electrons
- 1 2
- 2 8
- 3 18
- 4 32
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35electron
proton
neutron
CHLORINE 17p , 17e-
SODIUM 11p , 11e-
CARBON 6p , 6e-
OXYGEN 8p , 8e-
NEON 10p , 10e-
HYDROGEN 1p , 1e-
HELIUM 2p , 2e-
36Electron Vacancies
- Unfilled shells make atoms likely to react
- Hydrogen, carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen all have
vacancies in their outer shells
NITROGEN 7p , 7e-
CARBON 6p , 6e-
HYDROGEN 1p , 1e-
37You do it - Draw the shell configuration for each
of these
- 2, 8, 1
- 2, 8, 7
- 2, 8, 18, 1
- 2, 8
- 2, 8, 18, 2
38- A B C
- What are these elements?
- Hint Its protons equal its atomic number, and
since it is an atom so do the number of
electrons.
39What are these elements? A oxygen B
aluminum C Nitrogen
40Periodic Table
- Each element in a family or group on the Periodic
Table has common properties - Examples
- Valence electrons
- Ion formation
41Ions
- Lose electrons
- Valence electrons 1-4
- Na 1 valence 1 ion
- Be 2 valence 2 ion
- B 3 valence 3 ion
- C 4 valence 4 ion
- Gain electrons
- Valence electrons 4-7
- C 4 valence -4 ion
- N 5 valence -3 ion
- O 6 valence -2 ion
- F 7 valence -1 ion
42- When an atom or molecule loses electrons, it
becomes positively charged. - For example, when Na loses an electron it becomes
Na. - Positively charged ions are called cations.
43- When an atom or molecule gains electrons, it
becomes negatively charged. - For example when Cl gains an electron it becomes
Cl-. - Negatively charged ions are called anions.
- An atom or molecule can gain or lose more than
one electron.
44Valence Electrons of 8A- Noble Gases or Inert
Gases
- Element Valance electrons
- He 2
- Ne 8
- Ar 8
- Kr 8
44
45New Terms
- Chemical bond joining one atom to another by
electrons joining - Compound are molecules that consist of two or
more different elements in proportions combined
by a chemical bond - Molecule two or more atoms of the same element
or different elements joined by a chemical bond
45
46New Terms
- Formula- the proportional arrangement and short
hand for a chemical - Chemical reaction- reacting two or more compounds
and or molecules with one another - Reactants the things that are mixed together in
a chemical reaction - Products the things that are produced in a
chemical reaction
46
47Electron Vacancies
- Unfilled shells make atoms likely to react
- Hydrogen, carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen all have
vacancies in their outer shells
47
48Chemical Bonds, Molecules, Compounds
- Bond is union between electron structures of
atoms - Atoms bond to form molecules
- Molecules may contain atoms of only one element -
O2 - Molecules of compounds contain more than one
element - H2O
48
49Formulas Chemical Bookkeeping
- Use symbols for elements when writing formulas
- (Need to remember!) Formula for glucose
is C6H12O6 - 6 carbon
- 12 hydrogen
- 6 oxygen
49
50Chemical Bookkeeping
- Chemical equation shows reaction
- Reactants ---gt Products
- Equation for photosynthesis
REACTANTS
PRODUCTS
sunlight energy
6CO2
12H2O
C6H12O6
6H2O
6O2
---gt
CARBON DIOXIDE
WATER
WATER
OXYGEN
GLUCOSE
12 hydrogens 6 oxygens
12 oxygens
6 carbons 12 hydrogens 6 oxygens
6 carbons 12 oxygens
24 hydrogens 12 oxygens
50
51Major Bonds in Biological Molecules
- .
- The bonding behavior of biological molecules
starts with the number and arrangement of
electrons in each type of atom. - Ionic, covalent, and hydrogen bonds are the main
categories of bonds between atoms in biological
molecules.
51
52New Terms
- Ionic Bonds gain or lose control over e-
- Covalent Bonds share e-
- Hydrogen Bonds between H
52
53Ion Formation
- Atom has equal number of electrons and protons -
no net charge - Atom loses electron(s), becomes positively
charged ion - Atom gains electron(s), becomes negatively
charged ion
54 Ionic Bonding
- One atom loses electrons, becomes positively
charged ion - Another atom gains these electrons, becomes
negatively charged ion - Charge difference attracts the two ions to each
other
55Formation of NaCl
- Sodium atom (Na) (1 ion)
- Outer shell has one electron
- Chlorine atom (Cl) ( -1 ion)
- Outer shell has seven electrons
- Na transfers electron to Cl, forming Na and Cl-
- Ions remain together as NaCl (no charge)
55
56Ionic Bond
- The electron from sodium atom is lost to the
chlorine atom which gains the electron.
56
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58Covalent Bonding
- Atoms share a pair or pairs of electrons to fill
outermost shell - Example below is a single bond
- Single covalent bond
- Double covalent bond
- Triple covalent bond
Molecular hydrogen
58
59- Single bonds between H and carbon . Methane
(lower right) has 4 single bonds formed with
hydrogen.
59
6060
61Triple bonds
- Share 6 electrons for three bonds (triple)
61
62Polar and non-polar covalent bond
- Non Polar share electrons equally
- Polar do not equally share electrons
- Electronegativity is a measure of the tendency of
an atom to attract a bonding pair of electrons.
62
63Water Polar Covalent molecule
- Oxygen is much more electronegative than hydrogen
- shared electrons spend more time with the oxygen
part of the molecule than with the hydrogen part - Unequal sharing of electrons results in the
oxygen having a partial negative charge and the
hydrogen atoms having a partial positive charge.
63
64Water A Polar Covalent Molecule
- Molecule has no net charge
- Oxygen end has a slight negative charge
- Hydrogen end has a slight positive charge
O
H
H
64
65Covalent Polar or Nonpolar Bonds
- Non polar if atoms share electrons equally
- Hydrogen gas (H - H)
- Polar if electrons spend more time near nucleus
with most protons - Water
- Electrons more attracted to O nucleus than to H
nuclei
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66Hydrogen Bonding
- Atom in one polar covalent molecule is attracted
to oppositely charged atom in another such
molecule or in same molecule - Hydrogen bonds are weak.
Water molecule
Ammonia molecule
66
6767
68Hydrogen Bonding
- Important role in the structure and function of
biological compounds. - Found in DNA
- Gives DNA unique properties
68
69Properties of Water
- Bonds to hydrophilic substances
- Water loving
- Repels hydrophobic ones
- Water hating
- Temperature stabilizing
- Expands floats when it freezes
69
70Water cont.
- Capacity to dissolve substances
- Universal solvent
- Evaporation heat energy converts liquid water
to a gaseous state - Form skin evaporation can help cool body
- Water boils at sea level at 100C or 212F.
- Water freezes at sea level at 0C or 32F.
70
71Water cont.
- Cohesion has the ability to resist rupturing
when placed under tension - Cohesion causes high surface tension
- Shows a capacity to resist rupturing when
stretched - Helps to absorb nutrient laden water to grow
- Water rise in tubes
- Some evaporates in leaves
- Pull other water molecules to fill in behind
those evaporated
71
72Ice
Liquid water
- This slide shows hydrogen bonding (white dotted
line) - Solids are more organized in shape.
72
73Why Ice Floats
- In ice, hydrogen bonds lock molecules in a
lattice - Water molecules in lattice are spaced farther
apart then those in liquid water - Ice is less dense than water
74Hydrophilic HydrophobicSubstances
- Hydrophilic substances
- Polar
- Hydrogen bond with water
- Example sugar
- Hydrophobic substances
- Nonpolar
- Repelled by water
- Example oil
75 Temperature-Stabilizing Effects
- Liquid water can absorb much heat before its
temperature rises - Why?
- Much of the added energy disrupts hydrogen
bonding rather than increasing the movement of
molecules
76Evaporation of Water
- Large energy input can cause individual molecules
of water to break free into air - As molecules break free, they carry away some
energy (lower temperature) - Evaporative water loss is used by mammals to
lower body temperature
77Water Is a Good Solvent
- Ions and polar molecules dissolve easily in water
- When solute dissolves, water molecules cluster
around its ions or molecules and keep them
separated
78Water Cohesion
- Hydrogen bonding holds molecules in liquid water
together - Creates surface tension
- Allows water to move as continuous column upward
through stems of plants
79Example of Waters Cohesion
Fig. 2-11a, p.27
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81The pH Scale
- Ions dissolved in fluids inside and outside the
each living cell influence its structure and
function. - Among the most influential are hydrogen ions.
- They have far reaching effects largely because
they are chemically active and because there are
so many of them.
81
82The pH Scale
- Measures H concentration of fluid
- Change of 1 on scale means 10X change in H
concentration - Highest H Lowest H
- 0---------------------7-------------------14
- Acidic Neutral Basic
83pH Scale
- Water splits into ions
- H is an acid
- OH- is a base
- The greater the number of H concentration the
lower the pH. - The greater the number of OH- concentration the
higher the pH.
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84Acid/Base
- Bases
- Accept OH-
- Above 7
- Also called alkaline
Both can cause severe damage
84
85The pH Scale
85
8686
87Acid Rain
- A coal-burning power plant emits sulfur dioxide,
which dissolves in water vapor to form acid rain
88Salt Water
- A salt is any substance that dissolves in water
and releases ions (not H) - Forms when and acid and a base are mixed.
- HCL NaOH? H2O NaCl
- Hydrochloric acid reacting with sodium hydroxide
produces water and sodium chloride (salt) - NaCl (solute) dissolves in water (solvent) forms
Na and Cl- (ions)
88
89Buffers Against Shifts in pH
- Cells must maintain homeostasis
- Cells must respond to shifts in pH quickly
- Respiratory acidosis high carbon dioxide levels
causing pH drop in blood , muscles tetany
(continued muscle contraction) - Respiratory alkaosis pH rises in blood
- Blood pH drops can cause a coma if not corrected
- Buffer systems reponds to readjust pH
- Limited in ability
89
90Carbonic Acid-Bicarbonate Buffer System
- When blood pH rises, carbonic acid dissociates to
form bicarbonate and H - H2C03 -----gt HC03- H
- When blood pH drops, bicarbonate binds H to form
carbonic acid - HC03- H -----gt H2C03
90
91Summary
- Ions dissolved in fluids on the inside and
outside of cells have key roles in cell function. - Acidic substances release hydrogen ions, and
basic substances accept them. - Salts are compounds that release ions other than
H and OH-. - Acid-base interactions help maintain pH, which is
the H concentration in a fluid. - Buffer systems help maintain the bodys acid-base
balance at levels suitable for life.
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