Unit 2 Note Packet
Download
Report
Transcript Unit 2 Note Packet
Unit 2
Chemical Basis for Life
Chapter 6
Chemistry in Biology
Section 1: Atoms, Elements, & Compounds
Section 2: Chemical Reactions
Section 3: Water & Solutions
Section 4: The Building Blocks of Life
(p. 148-155)
(p. 156-160)
(p. 161-165)
(p. 166-171)
Section 1
Atoms, Elements, and Compounds
Objectives
• Living things consist of atoms of different elements
• Ions form when atoms gain or lose electrons
• Atoms share pairs of electrons in covalent bonds
The atom
• The _______ is the smallest basic unit of _______________
• Atoms are very small
The atom
• There are ____________ parts of a an atom
Subatomic
particle
Charge
Location
Proton
Positive
Nucleus
Neutron
Neutral
Nucleus
Electron
Negative
Surrounding
nucleus
Elements
• An _________is one particular type of atom, and it cannot be broken
down into a simpler substance by ordinary chemical means
• Gold
• Aluminum
• Helium
Key Elements
• In biology, there are SIX very important elements
•
•
•
•
•
•
Carbon
Hydrogen
Oxygen
Phosphorus
Sulfur
Nitrogen
How are elements different
• The number of protons determines the __________of an element
• Carbon: 6 protons
• Oxygen: 8 protons
• The number of electrons determines the _________of an element
• Carbon: 6 electrons, 4 on OUTSIDE
• Oxygen: 8 electrons, 6 on OUTSIDE
Carbon diagrams
Lonely Atoms
• Atoms rarely are found _____________in nature
• They will do ANYTHING to get to ____electrons on the outside
• Steal
• Dump
• Share
Compounds
• A ____________is a substance made of atoms of different elements
bonded together
• Result of sharing, stealing, or dumping electrons
• Atoms bonded in a specific ratio
Carbon Compounds (more about this later)
• Carbon can form many various bonds to form
•
•
•
•
Carbohydrates
_____________
Nucleic acids
_____________
Ionic Bond
• _________bonds are formed through the electrical force between
oppositely charged ions
• Opposites attract!
• Ex: Salt aka sodium chloride (NaCl)
• Positive sodium (Na+)
• Negative chloride (Cl-)
NaCl – ionic bond
Ions
• ________are atoms that have gained or lost one or more electrons.
• Results in a change in electrical charge
• Gain e• Lose e-
becomes ______________
becomes ______________
Ions, cont.
• Very important to organisms
• Hydrogen ions (H+) needed to produce chemical energy in cells
• Calcium ions (Ca2+) needed for all muscle movement in your body
• Chloride ions (Cl-) needed for many chemical signals in the brain
Covalent Bond
• Not all atoms easily gain or lose their electrons!
• Some atoms share their electrons instead!
• ___________Bond: forms when atoms share a pair of electrons
• Usually a very strong bond
• Atoms may have several covalent bonds to share several electrons
H2O – covalent bond
CO2 – covalent bond
Covalent Bond, cont.
• ____________: two or more atoms held together by covalent bonds
• Ex: carbon dioxide (CO2)
• Carbon atoms needs 4 electrons to fill outer level, oxygen needs two
• Carbon shares with 2 oxygen!
Review
• What are atoms?
• How are the particles that make up atoms diagrammed?
• What are the similarities between covalent and ionic bonds?
Section 2
Chemical Reactions
Objectives
• Bonds break and form during chemical
reactions.
• Chemical reactions release or absorb energy.
Evidence of a chemical reaction
_______________change
Formation of a solid (precipitate)
Color change (sometimes)
Odor (sometimes)
Formation of _____________
Bonds
break & form during chemical reactions
Plant/Animal cells break down sugars to get usable
energy
Cells build protein molecules by bonding amino acids
together
Chemical
reactions change substances into
different substances by breaking and forming
chemical ______________
___________are
the substance changed during a
chemical reactions
Oxygen (O2) & Glucose (C6H12O6)
_________are
the substances made by a chemical
reaction
Carbon Dioxide (CO2) & Water (H2O)
6O2 + C6H12O6
6CO2 + 6H2O
Energy
Bond energy is the amount of energy that will break a
bond between two atoms.
Every atom has different bond energy
A SPECIFIC amount of energy is needed to break bonds in an
oxygen molecule
A SPECIFIC amount of energy is needed to break bonds in a
glucose molecule
Energy
is needed to break bonds in molecules
is released when bonds are formed
The amount of energy released is equal to the energy
that breaks the same bond
Energy needed to break apart water molecule = energy
released when hydrogen & oxygen atoms bond to form a
water molecule
All
chemical reactions involve changes in ___________
Energy added to the reactants breaks their chemical bonds
When new bonds form in the products, energy is released
Energy
is both absorbed and _______during a chemical
reaction!
Some release more energy than they absorb (Generous)
Some absorb more energy than they release (Greedy)
Generous chemical RXNs
that release more energy
than they absorb
= ______________reaction
Excess energy is the difference in bond energy
between the reactants and products
Excess energy is often released as heat or light
Cellular respiration releases usable energy for your cells &
heat!
Greedy chemical RXNs
that absorb more energy
than they release
= _______________reaction
In photosynthesis, plants absorb energy from sunlight and use
that to make sugars and carbohydrates
Exothermic VS. Endothermic graphs
But how does a rxn start?
• Some energy must first be absorbed by the reactants in ANY chemical
reaction
• The amount of energy needed will vary
• _________energy is the amount of energy that needs to be absorbed
for a chemical reaction to start
• Push a rock up a hill
Catalysts & Enzymes
• A ________is a substance that lowers the activation energy needed to
start a chemical reaction.
• Special proteins called _______are the biological catalysts that speed
up the rate of chemical reactions in biological processes.
Review
• What are the parts of a chemical reaction?
• How can energy changes be related to chemical reactions?
• What is the importance of enzymes in living organisms?
Section 3
Water and Solutions
Objectives
• Life depends on hydrogen bonds in water.
• Many compounds dissolve in water.
• Some compounds form acids or bases.
•Organisms’ bodies, (their _____________),
are made up of mostly ____________________
•The water in cells gives the cell _______________
and ___________________ materials within
organisms.
•All of the processes necessary for an
organism’s life take place within the
______________________________ of the cell
1. ______________________
2. ______________________
3. ______________________
Negative Charge
•Water is a “______________” molecule
•Form when atoms in a molecule
have ____________ pulls on the
_____________ they share.
Positive Charge
•Opposite charges of polar molecules can
interact to form ____________________
bonds.
•An attraction between a slightly
_______________ hydrogen atom
and a slightly ______________
atom.
(Usually
_______________________________)
•Hydrogen bonds are part of the
structures of _______________ and
of ______________
Positive Charge
Shared Electrons
Cohesion: the attraction among
__________________ of the same
substance.
Cohesion from hydrogen bonds makes
water molecules _____________________.
Cohesion produces __________________,
( “skin on water” )
Adhesion: the attraction among
__________________ of ______________
substances.
For example, water molecules stick to other
things.
Water in a test tube, (water is attracted
to the ____________)
Materials such as
________________ and
____________ cannot be
transported form one part
of an organism to another
unless they are dissolved
in blood, plant sap, or
other water based fluids.
______________:
Mixture of a substance
that is the same
throughout.
___________:
Substance that is present
in the greater amount and
dissolves another
substance.
___________:
Substance that dissolves
in a solvent.
Mixtures
____________________
____________________
• A mixture with easily separated
parts with their distinct
properties
• A mixture that it the SAME
throughout and hard to tell
individual characteristics
Some compounds form ______________ or _____________
because they _______________ into _______________
when they dissolve in ___________.
BASE:
ACID:
Compounds
that release
a proton
- a hydrogen ion(H+) –
when it dissolves
in water
Compounds that
remove H+ ions
from
a solution
More basic
More acidic
neutral
Review
• How does the structure of water make it a good solvent?
• What are the similarities and differences between solutions and
suspensions?
• What are the differences between acids and bases?
Section 4
The Building Blocks of Life
Objectives
• Carbon atoms have unique bonding properties.
• Four main types of carbon-based molecules are found in living things.
____________________
____________________
____________________
____________________
____________________
_______________are
molecules composed of
carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
Include sugars & starches
Can be broken down to provide useable energy for
cells
Major part of plant cell structure
The most
basic carbs are simple sugars,
monosaccharides
Polysaccharides are
polymers of monosaccharides
•USED BY CELLS FOR __________ ___________ AND
__________ ____________.
SIMPLE CARBS = _______________________________
COMPLEX CARBS = _____________________________
_____________________________
________________________________
________________________________
Proteins are
A
the most varied of the carbon-based molecules in organisms
Have a role in movement, eyesight, digestion, etc.
_______________is a polymer made of monomers called amino acids
__________are
molecules that contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and
sometimes sulfur
Organisms use 20 different amino acids to build proteins
The body makes 12 of the 20, the other 8 come from food
•MAKE UP _________________.
•INVOLVED IN ALL _______ ____________.
•BUILDING BLOCKS = _________ __________.
•_________________= TYPE OF PROTEIN THAT STARTS AND
SPEEDS UP CHEMICAL REACTIONS IN CELLS.
_______are
nonpolar molecules that include fats,
oils, and cholesterol
Contain chains of carbon bonded to oxygen &
hydrogen
Some broken down for useable energy
Others are part of a cell’s structure
Fatty
acids are chains of carbon atoms bonded to
hydrogen atoms.
Saturated fatty acids have single carbon-carbon bonds
Unsaturated fatty acids have double carbon-carbon
bonds
•DON’T MIX WITH ______________.
•PHOSPHOLIPIDS – MAKE UP ________ ______________.
•FATS AND OILS THAT _________ ___________.
•ORGANISMS USE FATS AND OILS WHEN THEY HAVE
USED UP ___________________.
•_________- SOLID AT ROOM TEMPERATURE.
•_________- LIQUID AT ROOM TEMPERATURE.
•MAJOR ___________ ___________ MOLECULE IN CELL.
•ENERGY IN __________________ AND __________ AND
_____________________ MUST BE TRANSFERRED TO
ATP IN CELL TO BE USED.
Detailed instructions to
build proteins are stored
in extremely long carbon-based molecules called
nucleic acids
Nucleic acids are polymers that are made up of
monomers called nucleotides
Nucleic
acids differ from the other carbon-based
molecules
The others have a large # of functions
Nucleic acids have just 1 function… make proteins
DNA stores info for putting amino acids together to make
proteins
RNA helps to build proteins
•HAVE ALL INFO NEEDED TO MAKE __________.
•“_______________” OF LIFE.
•BUILDING BLOCKS OF _____________.
•TWO TYPES: ________ AND _______.
Each
subunit of a complete carbonbased molecule is called a _________
A
polymer is a large molecule, or
macromolecule, made of many
monomers bonded together
Monomers of a polymer may be the same
(ex. Starches)
Or different (proteins)
COMPOUND
BUILDING BLOCK
(POLYMER)
(MONOMER)
PROTEIN
AMINO ACID
LIPID (FAT)
FATTY ACID
CARBOHYDRATE
SUGARS
NUCLEIC ACIDS
NUCLEOTIDE
Review
• What is the role of carbon in living organisms?
• What are the four major families of biological macromolecules?
• What are the functions of each group of biological macromolecules?