Title: Chemistry of Life: Atoms, Ions, Molecules, and Water
1Chemistry of LifeAtoms, Ions, Molecules, and
Water
August 9 Lecture Brian Sears
2Atoms
- Matter- any substance that has mass
- Matter is composed of small particles called
atoms.
Difference between mass and weight Mass refers
to the amount of a substance, whereas weight
refers to the force of gravity on the substance.
EX walking on the moon
3Example of an atom Carbon
- Carbon is an essential atom for life.
- It can assemble into DNA, proteins, carbohydrates
and lipids, making complex life possible.
4Carbon
- Atomic mass is the number of protons and neutrons
in the nucleus of the atom. Carbon is 12. - Atomic number is the number of protons in the
nucleus. Carbon is 6. - Carbon is a neutral atom.
5Element
- Atoms with the same atomic number (same number of
protons) have the same chemical properties and
belong to the same element.
6Energy the ability to do work
- Electrons are negatively charged and carry the
ability to be attracted to the positively
nucleus, and repelled by the negative charged of
other electrons.
- When an electron moves toward the nucleus it
releases energy, and absorbs energy when it moves
away from the nucleus.
7Electron Shells
- Electron shells are where the energy of the atom
is stored. - Orbital is the volume of space around a nucleus
where an electron is most likely to be found.
Each electron shell has a specific number of
orbitals.
Since carbon has 6 electrons, how many electron
shells and orbitals does it have?
8Ions
- An atom can gain or loose electrons from its
outer shell. - An ion is when the number of electrons and the
number of protons is not equal because the atom
has gained or lost an electron.
A sodium atom becomes a sodium ion when it looses
an electron because the nucleus is left
unbalanced and becomes positively charged.
9Isotopes
- An isotope is an atom that has the same number of
protons nut different number of neutrons. - The number of neutrons in an atom of a particular
element can vary without changing the properties
of the element. - Isotopes have the same atomic number, but
different atomic mass.
10Molecules
- A molecule is a group of atoms held together by
energy. - A chemical bond is the energy or force that holds
two atoms together.
11Ionic Bond
- When atoms are attracted to each other by
opposite electrical charges. - 2 key properties strong and non-directional
12Covalent Bond
- A strong chemical bond when that forms between
two atoms when they share electrons. - Why do atoms in molecules share electrons?
- Single, double (two pairs of electrons are
shared), triple covalent bonds. - Carbon has 4 electrons in outer shell and can
form as many as 4 covalent bonds.
13Hydrogen Bonds
- Form when the positive end of one polar molecule
is attracted to the negative end of another polar
molecule. - Are weak chemical bonds and one nucleus may be
better at attracting the shared electron than the
other and spend more time in the vicinity of the
more strongly attracted atom. - Characteristics highly directional and create
tight bonds through the effect of many weak
interactions.
14Please take out the following
15DAE Prompt
- How does water temperature affect the performance
of an Olympic swimmer?
16Question
- What makes water so unique?
17Hydrogen bonds give water unique properties
- Heat storage- it takes water a long time to boil
and cool - Ice formation- Why is ice less dense than water?
- High heat of vaporization- water can evaporate
- Cohesion (ability to bind to other polar
molecules that are water when this polar
substance is not water, it is adhesion) - High polarity- hydrophilic and hydrophobic
18Hydrophilic Vs. Hydrophobic
19Hydrophilic
- Water loves water (or other polar molecules)
e.g. sodium and chloride
20Hydrophobic
- Water hates non-polar molecules
21DAE Prompt
- How does caffeine affect the heart rate of a dog?
22DAE Prompt
- How does the amount of study time affect student
test scores?