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Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

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Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life. Can you list the levels of organization?. Matter. Matter – Anything that has mass and takes up space – made up of atoms. States of matter Solid – has definite shape and volume Liquid – has definite volume, changeable shape Gas – has changeable shape and volume. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life • Can you list the levels of organization?
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Page 1: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

• Can you list the levels of organization?

Page 2: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Matter

• Matter – Anything that has mass and takes up space – made up of atoms.

States of matter

– Solid – has definite shape and volume

– Liquid – has definite volume, changeable shape

– Gas – has changeable shape and volume

Page 3: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Understanding Basic Chemistry

• Atom – the smallest particle into which a substance can be broken by ordinary chemical means.– Parts of an Atom:

• Proton – in the nucleus and has a positive charge

• Neutron – in the nucleus and has a neutral charge

• Electron – in the orbital (shell, energy level) and has a negative charge

Page 4: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

• Atomic Mass = protons + neutrons

• Atomic Number = protons

• Electrons usually equal the protons if the atom is neutral.

• Remember an atom is defined by it’s number of protons. If you change the protons you change the atom!!!!!!!!

Page 5: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

• Valence – number of electrons in the outer energy level. Example 7

• Oxidation Number – number of electrons an atom has gained or lost and the charge associated. Ex. Looking at the above valence of 7 the oxidation number is: -1

• Octet Rule - filling the outer energy level to 8 electrons (exception is the first energy level that can only hold two electrons)

Page 6: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Atom - The smallest particle into which a substance can be broken by ordinary chemical means.

•Remember an atom has a nucleus that consists of neutrons (neutral) and protons (positive)

•Electrons (negative) are found orbiting the nucleus

Levels Reviewed

Page 7: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Element – Groups of the same type of atom

Molecule- Groups of non metal atoms bonded together by covalent bonds & acting as a group.

Compound – Two or more elements chemically combined ex. H2O

Page 8: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

(Organelles- Basic structures within cells – has a specific function) (remember on the line not on a step?)

Cell - Basic Unit of living things.

Page 9: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Tissue- Tissues are groups of the same cells – they have a common function.

Organ- Composed of several different tissues working together.

Page 10: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Organ system - A group of organs working together to perform a major body process. Ex. Digestion.

Organism- (a group of organ systems in an individual) – any living thing – this would be multicellular (more than one cell)

Page 11: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

• Population - (1 species ex. squirrels)

• Community - (2 or more species ex. Squirrels and maple trees)

• Ecosystem - (biotic and abiotic - meaning all the living and nonliving things in an area)

• Biome - (regional or global area ex. The tundra or a rain forest)

• Biosphere - the earth.

Page 12: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

General Chemistry You Should Remember

Page 13: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Mixtures

• Mixtures – two or more substances not chemically combined – therefore they retain their own properties

Page 14: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Types of Mixtures:

1. Solutions – evenly combined mixture composed of:

• Solvent – does the dissolving ex. Water

• Solute – the substance being dissolved ex. Sugar

Page 15: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

2. Suspensions –The particles will spread out and eventually settle – large particles (saturated, unsaturated, and supersaturated)

• Example sand in water (whole blood)

3. Colloid – a mixture that has medium particles – held in solution by their association with water

• ex. Liquid jello….. Mayonnaise

Page 16: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Mixtures Compared with Compounds

• No chemical bonding takes place in mixtures• Most mixtures can be separated by physical

means• Mixtures can be heterogeneous or

homogeneous• Compounds cannot be separated by physical

means• All compounds are homogeneous

Page 17: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Writing Chemical Equations• The left side of an equation is called the

reactants.

• The right side of an equation is called the products

• An arrow separates the reactants from the products. The arrow is called a “yields” sign

Ex. Na + Cl NaCl

Page 18: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

TYPES OF BONDS(Bonds store energy)

IONIC BONDS- ELECTRONS ARE TRANSFERRED FROM ONE ATOM TO ANOTHER AND IONS ARE FORMED

• Ions are charged atoms resulting from the gain or loss of electrons

• Anions have gained one or more electrons (taking is negative)

• Cations have lost one or more electrons (giving is positive)

Page 19: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Page 20: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Covalent bonds- when atoms share electrons (the strongest bond)

e.x. Peptide bonds – between C and N in proteins

Page 21: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Page 22: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Hydrogen bonds- a “bond” between hydrogen and 2 small electronegative

atoms ex. f, n, o (the weakest bond – and remember it is really an attraction.

Page 23: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Page 24: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Electrons shared equally between atoms produce nonpolar covalent molecules

Unequal sharing of electrons produces polar covalent molecules (ex. Water!) (unequal causes a “charge” on each molecule)

Polar and Nonpolar Covalent Molecules

Page 25: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Types of Reactions• Chemical Reactions – the process of breaking

down chemical bonds and/or forming new ones (a chemical equations shows this)– To do this an activation energy is needed

( the energy that is needed to get the reaction going)• Exothermic – there is a net release of

energy (it feels warm)• Endothermic – there is a net absorption

of energy (feels cool)

Page 26: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Type of Reaction

Definition Equation

Synthesis

Decomposition

Single Replacement

Double Replacement

.

A = Red B = Blue C = Green D = Yellow

A + B → AB

AB → A + B

AB + C → AC + B

AB + DC → AC + DB

Two or more elements or compounds combine to make a more complex substance (ex. Dehydration synthesis – takes H2O away)

Compounds break down into simpler substances (ex

hydrolysis – puts H2O back)

Occurs when one element replaces another one in a compound

Occurs when different atoms in two different

compounds trade places

Page 27: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

Additional Vocabulary

• 1. Dehydration synthesis (condensation) – the formation of complex molecules by the removal of H2O

Page 28: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

2. Anabolism – Energy requiring building phase of metabolism in which simpler substances are combined to form more complex substances

Page 29: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

3. Hydrolysis – is an example of a decomposition reaction where water is added back into the molecule

Page 30: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

4. Catabolism – Process in which living cells break down substances into simpler substances

Page 31: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

SUMMARYSUMMARY

1. The Atomic Number of an atom =

number of

protons in the nucleus. (or electrons in a neutral atom)

2. The Atomic Mass of an atom =

number of Protons + Neutrons in the nucleus.

Page 32: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

3. Remember:

•Protons are positive,

•Neutrons are neutral

•electrons are negative.

4. Protons, Neutrons are in the nucleus and electrons are in the

shell.

Page 33: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

5. The number of Protons =

Number of Electrons in a neutral atom or the atomic number.

6. A “normal” atom has a neutral charge

7. An atom that has given or taken electrons is called an

ion (cation gave….. Anion took)

8. An atom that has a different number of neutrons is called an

isotope

Page 34: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

9. Electrons orbit the nucleus in shells/energy levels/orbitals.

10. Each shell can only carry a set number of electrons

Page 35: Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life

11. Valence – number of electrons in the outer energy level. Example 7

12. Oxidation Number – number of electrons an atom has gained or lost and the charge associated. Ex. Looking at the above valence of 7 the oxidation number is: -1

13. Octet Rule - filling the outer energy level to 8 electrons (exception is the first energy level that can only hold two electrons)


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