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The Chemical Context of Life
Campbell and Reece Chapter 2 The Chemical Context of Life
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Elements & Compounds Element: substance that cannot be broken down to other substances by chemical reactions 92 natural-occurring elements
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Compounds 2 or more different elements combined in a fixed proportion
compound has different properties than properties of individual elements that make up the compound
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Compounds are pure substances
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Essential Elements of life
those of the 92 that organisms must have to live & reproduce species specific; humans need 25 elements plants need 17
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Essential elements 96% of living matter (by mass) made up of: Oxygen
Carbon Hydrogen Nitrogen
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4% of living matter (by mass) made up of:
Calcium Phosphorus Potassium Sulfur Chlorine Magnesium
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Trace Elements make up <1%
organisms require these in minute amounts to name only a few: Iron Iodine (in vertebrates only) Zinc Selenium Manganese
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Toxic elements Arsenic: Mercury
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Properties of elements
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Atomic mass 1 proton or 1 neutron = 1 amu
1 amu = 1.7 x 10² g = 1 dalton mass of e- ignored
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Mass number #protons + #neutrons
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isotopes different forms of same element: same # protons
different # of neutrons occurs naturally Atomic Mass see on periodic table is weighted mass average of all isotopes
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Radioactive Isotopes nucleus spontaneously decays
giving off particles & energy used medically to measure an organ’s function, monitor tumor growth
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Radioactive isotopes decay hazardous to living organisms by damaging cellular molecules
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Energy levels of electrons
electrons only subatomic particle involved in chemical reactions e- have PE due to their position around nucleus of atom electron’s (-) charge attracted to (+) proton the farther out e- is from nucleus, the more PE that e- has
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Electron energy levels
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Valence electrons electrons in outermost shell
if valence shell completely filled: atom is nonreactive (inert like noble gases)
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Electron orbitals
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Chemical bonds formed by interactions between atoms with incomplete valence orbitals
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Covalent bonds sharing of a pair of valence electrons by 2 atoms
2 or more atoms held together by covalent bonds = molecule
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Types of covalent bonds
1 pair e- shared = single covalent bond 2 pair e- shared = double covalent bond 3 pair e- shared = triple covalent bond hydrogen gas
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Nonpolar covalent bond
shared pair of electron are shared evenly between the 2 atoms
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electronegativity attraction of a particular atom for the electrons in covalent bond greater the electronegativity on 1 atom over the other in the covalent bond, the more likely the bond will be a polar covalent bond
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Polar covalent bonds electrons of the bond are not shared equally
bonds vary in their polarity: depends on the relative electronegativity of the 2 atoms
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Ionic bonds transfer of e- from metal nonmetal
creates cations (+) & anions (-) opposite charges attract forming ionic bond compounds formed by ionic bonds called ionic compounds or salts as solids form crystals, very strong bonds as liquids completely dissociate
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Weak chemical bonds in living organisms: most of the strongest chemical bonds are covalent weak bonds also important: hydrogen bonds, van der Waals, ionic bonds in water maintain shape of proteins, DNA reversibility key to their importance
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Hydrogen bonds water: H held to O in polar covalent bonds
partial (+) charge on H makes it attract the partial (-) charge on O from another water molecule
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Van der Waals forces nonpolar covalent bonds may not have electrons symmetrically distributed @ any given instant in time a region of the molecule may be slightly (-) or (+) ever-changing regions of (+) or (-) charge occurs only when atoms or molecules are very close together
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Molecular shape & function
shape of a molecule key to its function in cell shape of a molecule with >2 atoms determined by positions of atom’s orbitals
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Molecular shape determines how biological molecules recognize & respond to each other with specificity 2 molecules temporarily forming weak bond can only happen if their shapes are complimentary to each other
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Molecular shape because morphine and endorphins have same shape that fits into endorphin receptors morphine is able to create same response as endorphins: pain relief & euphoria during stress
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Endorphins & morphine
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Chemical reactions chemical bonds of reactants broken, chemical bonds of products formed in a chemical reaction
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Chemical equilibrium
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