1 / 53

Introductory Chemistry

Introductory Chemistry. Pages 22-40. Introduction to Chemistry. The science of structure and interactions of matter (anything that occupies space and has mass). Chemical Elements and Atoms. Recall:

alika
Download Presentation

Introductory Chemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introductory Chemistry Pages 22-40

  2. Introduction to Chemistry • The science of structure and interactions of matter (anything that occupies space and has mass)

  3. Chemical Elements and Atoms • Recall: • Chemical elements are substances that cannot be broken down into a simpler form by ordinary means • Chemical symbols are the one or two letters of the element’s name designated to represent that element

  4. Chemical Elements and Atoms • 26 elements found in human body; 4 of them make-up 96% of the human body • Carbon 18% • Oxygen 65% • Hydrogen 10% • Nitrogen 3% • Another 8 make-up 3.8% • And the final 14 make up 0.2%, these are called trace elements

  5. Ions, Molecules, and Compounds • Ion charged particle (atom) that has lost or gained an e- • Example : Ca 2+; has given up two electrons • Molecules are formed when two or more atoms share electrons. Can be same elements sharing or different elements sharing • Recall: molecular formulas show number and type of atoms • Example: 2H2O 2 molecules of water composed of 2 atoms of hydrogen; one oxygen atom each • A compound is a molecule containing two or more different elements

  6. Chemical Bonds • Forces that bind the atoms of molecules and compounds together, resisting their separation • Chemically stable atoms have 8 electrons in their outer shells, and unlikely to form chemical bonds • Atoms without 8 electrons in their outer shell form chemical bonds easily because they want eight (octet rule) • Three general types of chemical bonds: • Ionic bonds • Covalent bonds • Hydrogen bonds

  7. Ionic Bonds • Force of attraction between ions of opposite charge • Cation: protons exceed electrons = positively charged atom • Anion: electrons exceed protons = negatively charged atom

  8. Ionic Bonds in Human Body • Nnn Give strength to the tissue

  9. Electrolytes • Most other ions in the human body are found dissolved in body fluids…. • Ionic compounds that break down into cations and anions when dissolved are called electrolytes; they can conduct an electrical current • Function examples: • Control water movement within the body • Maintain acid-base balances • Produce nerve impulses • Transport nutrients • Support mental function • Convert calories into energy

  10. Covalent Bonds • No electrons lost or gained; atoms form molecules by sharing one, two, or three pairs of their outer shell electrons • The more pairs shared the stronger the bond • Most common type of bonding in human body • Do not easily break apart in water (ionic bonds do)

  11. Types of Covalent Bonds Between Atoms of the Same Element • Single covalent: two atoms share one electron pair • Double covalent: two atoms share two electron pairs • Triple covalent: two atoms share three electron pairs

  12. Types of Covalent Bonds Between Atoms of the Different Elements • Nonpolar covalent: atoms share equally one atom does not attract the shared electrons more strongly than the other atom • Polar covalent: atoms share unequally one atom attracts the shared electron more strongly than the other

  13. Hydrogen Bonds • Polar covalent bonds between hydrogen and other atoms is the third type of chemical bond • Hydrogen is slightly positively charged and attracts another atom with a slightly negative charge; attraction between oppositely charged parts of molecules rather than sharing of electron • These are weak bonds • Do not bind atoms into molecules; rather create a link between molecules or between different parts of a large molecule, like DNA

  14. Chemical Reactions • Occurs when new bonds form and/or old bonds break • Enables body structures to be built and functions to be carried out through energy transfers

  15. Forms of Energy and Chemical Reactions • ENERGY capacity to do work • Two main forms: • Potential energy: energy stored by matter due to its position • Example: sitting at the top of a slide waiting to go down • Kinetic energy: energy of matter in motion • Example: sliding down the slide CHEMICAL ENERGY IS A FORM OF POTENTIAL ENERGY STORED IN THE BONDS OF MOLECULES

  16. Four Types of Chemical Reactions • Synthesis Reaction (“to put together”) • Two or more atoms, ions, or molecules combine to form new and larger molecules (anabolic) • Decomposition Reaction • A molecule is split apart into smaller parts (catabolic)

  17. Four Types of Chemical Reactions • Exchange Reaction • Consists of both synthesis and decomposition reactions • Reversible Reaction • Reactions that can go either way under different conditions, either building up or breaking down

  18. Chemical Compounds and Life Processes • Chemicals in human body divided into two main classes of compounds: • Inorganic compounds • Lack carbon • Structurally simple • Bonded ionically or covalently • Examples: water, many salts, acids, and bases • Exceptions: two-carbon compounds • carbon dioxide and bicarbonate ions • Organic compounds; contain carbon and usually also hydrogen • Covalently bonded • Examples: carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, and ATP (all macromolecules)

  19. Inorganic Compounds • Water most important one physiologically, also most abundant compound in all living systems • 55% to 60% of body mass in lean adults • Cells also are mostly composed of water • WHY IS WATER THE MOST IMPORTANT???

  20. Water • UNIQUE PROPERTIES….due to its polar covalent bonds and its ‘bent’ shape (can interact with four or more ions or molecules) • Solvency • Recall: • Solvent  liquid or gas in which some other substance can dissolve • Solute  substance that is dissolved in a solvent • Solution  combination of a solvent and a solute Importance of the property physiologically: Carries nutrients, oxygen, and wastes throughout the body Water..continued

  21. Water..continued • Excellent medium for chemical reactions; b/c dissolves so many substances • Medium for  some decomposition and synthesis reactions • Examples: • Digestion decomposition breaks down large nutrient molecules by adding water so they can be absorbed • Reaction called hydrolysis

  22. Water..continued • Absorbs and releases heat very slowly • Thus regulates body temperature = homeostasis • Requires a huge amount of heat to change form liquid to gas • Thus remains liquid sweat long enough to act cooling mechanism for body • Acts as a lubricant • Saliva, mucus, and others • Important in thoracic and abdominal cavity, allow internal organs to touch and slide over one another • Needed in joints, so bones, ligaments, and tendons can run against one another

  23. Inorganic Acids, Bases, and Salts • Acid: breaks apart; disassociates into one or more H+ ions in water • Base: breaks apart; disassociates into one or more OH- ions in water • Acids and bases react together to form salts • Example: NH3 + HCl → NH3Cl Ammonia + Hydrochloric acid  Ammonium chloride • Salt: breaks apart; disassociates into cations and anions in water; neither are H+ ions or OH- ions

  24. Acid-Base Balance: the Concept of pH • Homeostasis maintained through a balance between acid and base quantities in the human body • More H+ ions  acidic (acidity); • More OH- ions  basic (alkalinity) • Solutions acidity/alkalinity expressed as pH • Recall pH scale 0 to 14 • pH of 7 is neutral (pure water); H+ ions = OH- ions • pH below 7 acidic; H+ ions > OH-ions • pH above 7 basic (alkaline); H+ ions < OH-ions • Each whole number change on scale = 10-fold change in number of H+ ions

  25. Maintaining pH: Buffer Systems • pH level limits in body fluids very narrow in scope • Examples: • Blood 7.35 - 7.45 • Urine 6.5 -7.0 a.m.; 7.5 - 8.0 p.m. • Digestive system       • Lysosomes 4.0 -4.5 • Cytosol 7.2 - 7.4 • Mitochondrial matrix 7.5 - 7.8 • Buffers convert strong acids and bases into weak acids and bases to maintain optimum pH levels in body fluids

  26. Organic Compounds A F • Carbohydrates • Lipids • Proteins • Enzymes • Nucleic acids • Adenosine triphosphate B E D C

  27. Carbohydrates • Sugars, glycogen, starches, and cellulose • Contain C, H, and O (1:2:1 ratio; i.e. C6H12O6) • Three major groups of carbohydrates: • Monosaccharides, simple sugars • Disaccharides, simple sugars • Polysaccharides, complex carbohydrates

  28. Monosaccharides • Monomer of carbohydrates • Most important one=> glucose; source of chemical energy fro generating ATP • Others => ribose and deoxyribose used to make RNA and DNA

  29. Disaccharides • Two monosaccharides bonded together covalently through dehydration synthesis • Can be broken back down into monosaccharides through hydrolysis

  30. Polysaccharides • Contain tens or hundreds of monosaccharides joined through dehydration synthesis; can be broken down through hydrolysis • Main polysaccharides in human body => glycogen; made entirely of glucose • Stored in liver cells • Also in skeletal muscles Why do you think it is composed entirely of glucose; for what purpose???? Plants make starches ; we consume them and break them down to glucose to be used as an energy source Cellulose is the polysaccharide found in plant cell walls, we cannot digest it… provides us with roughage to aid digestive processes

  31. Lipids • Contain C, H, and O • Hydrophobic (insoluble in water) because of fewer polar covalent bonds • Includes: • triglycerides (fats; solids and oils; liquids at room temperature) • Phospholipids • Steroids • fatty acids • fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K) • Provide body with chemical signals, insulation, padding and stored energy (two times as much as carbohydrates or proteins) • Large amounts can contribute to heart & blood vessel disease

  32. Triglycerides • Most plentiful in human body • Stored in fat tissue called adipose tissue • Excess dietary carbohydrates, proteins, fats, and oils • Composed of three fatty acids (hydrocarbon) & a 3-C glycerol • Fatty acids can be saturated, monounsaturated, or polysaturated

  33. Saturated, Monounsaturated, and Polyunsaturated • Saturated • Single covalent bonds between carbons • Allows saturation of hydrogen atoms • Found mainly in animal products, mostly fats • Also a few tropical plants: cocoa, palm, coconut • Solid at room temperature

  34. Saturated, Monounsaturated, and Polyunsaturated • Monounsaturated (Unsaturated) • Contains one double covalent bond between two carbons • Lowers hydrogen atom saturation • Usually liquid at room temperature • Examples: olive oil, peanut oil

  35. Saturated, Monounsaturated, and Polyunsaturated • Polyunstaurated • More than one double covalent bond • Examples: canola oil, corn oil, safflower oil, sunflower oil, soybean oil

  36. Phospholipids • Phospholipids • Glycerol backbone with only two fatty acids attached to two carbons and a phosphate group attached to the third carbon • Nonpolar fatty acids are hydrophobic “tails” • Polar phosphate group are hydrophilic “heads” • Build body structures, make up cell membranes

  37. Steroids • Have complex carbon skeleton with 4 rings • Cholesterol – steroid body cells uses to synthesize other steroids • Examples: • Cells in ovaries synthesize estradiol (female sex hormone) • Leydig cells (found in testicles) synthesize testosterone (male sex hormone)

  38. Proteins • Contain C, H, O, and N • Some also contain S • Make up about ½ the body’s dry mass • Serve a multitude of functions: • Structure of body cells; like muscles, tendons, bones, skin, etc. • Act as enzymes; speeding up chemical reactions • Aid in muscle contractions • Some are antibodies; others are hormones; gene regulators; components of blood

  39. Amino Acid Structure • Building block (monomer) of proteins • Union of two or more amino acids produces a peptide bond • United molecule composed of two amino acids called a dipeptide • Three amino acids united called tripeptide • More than three united called polypeptide; these form proteins • Sequence is crucial for proper function • Made of amino group (NH2), carboxyl group (COOH) and one of many side or “R” (radical) groups • 20 different varieties of amino acids in human body

  40. Protein function is highly sensitive to protein structure!!!

  41. Protein Structure • Primary Protein Structure: • sequence of amino acids

  42. Secondary Protein Structure: • Sequence of amino acids linked by hydrogen bonds to form new shape, such as… Pleated sheath Helix

  43. Tertiary Protein Structure • Folded shape of protein when there are attractions between alpha helices & pleated sheets • Denaturation occurs when hydrogen bonds holding shape together are broken

  44. Denaturation The change in the shape of a protein molecule without breaking peptide bonds

  45. Denaturation • Is irreversible! • Changes or halts what the protein does • Is caused by…

  46. Heat,Detergents

  47. Quaternary Protein Structure • Protein consisting of more than one amino acid chain Model of myoglobin – an oxygen-storing protein found in muscles

  48. Enzymes • Enzymes are proteins; usually end in –ase • Named for type of chemical reaction they catalyze • Speed up chemical reactions by increasing the frequency of collisions and by properly orienting the colliding molecules • They are called catalysts because they speed up reactions without being altered themselves and can be used over and over again • Important properties: specificity, efficiency, and control…

  49. Specificity, Efficiency, and Control • Specificity: highly specific • Each enzyme catalyzes a particular chemical reaction that involves specific substrates (molecule upon which the enzyme acts) • Specific products are produced • Enzyme and substrate fit together like a lock-n-key • Efficiency: single enzyme molecule can convert substrate molecules to products at rate of 600,000 per second… • Control: regulated by cell’s genes; sets rate of synthesis by enzymes and their concentration • Co factors/ coenzymes: non-protein substances affect rate at which inactive enzyme forms become active and visa versa • Cofactors: ions of iron, zinc, magnesium, or calcium • Coenzymes: niacin, riboflavin, derivatives of Vitamin B

  50. Enzymes-Substrate Complex Enzymes are affected by…

More Related