14
1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity, electrolytic properties Properties of water, hydrogen bonding Acids, bases and buffers

1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

1

Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY

Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity, electrolytic properties Properties of water, hydrogen bonding Acids, bases and buffers

Page 2: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

2

Atomic structure

Atomic number Atomic mass

Number of electrons Electron energy levels # valence electrons

Number of protons Number of protons +

number of neutrons (isotopes vary in #

neutrons)

Equal to # of protons Row on periodic table Group # (1-8) (active bonding

electrons)

Page 3: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

3

Page 4: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

4

Bonds involve valence electrons

Metals tend to transfer electrons

Nonmetals tend to take electrons when bonding with metals

Nonmetals tend to share electrons when bonding to other non-metals

Ions: charged atoms due to the gain or loss of electrons

Ionic bonds: cations and anions

Covalent bonds: shared electrons

Page 5: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

5

Covalent and Ionic bonds

Page 6: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

6

Ionic bonds

Metals form cations when they lose valence electrons

Nonmetals form anions when they gain valence electrons

Generally are hydrophilic, dissolve in water, form electrolytes

Ionic equations show the ions into which they separate

Page 7: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

7

Covalent bonds

Shared electrons Non-metals to non-metals Do not form ions in solution May be polar or non-polar

covalent Covalent bonds are stronger

than ionic bonds CHNOPS compounds of

living things (“organic”) are covalently bonded

Page 8: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

8

H2O is a polar molecule, covalently bonded but with an unequal distribution of shared electrons

Page 9: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

9

Water is the “versatile solvent”

The hydrogen bondsbetween hydrogen and oxygen cause unique properties ofwater

Page 10: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

10

Polar solvents dissolve polar solutes

Sugar dissolves in water

Salt dissolves in water

Only ionic compounds form electrolytes in water

Page 11: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

11

Nonpolar solutes do not dissolve in polar solvents (water)

Salad oil

Oil

Gasoline

Vegetable shortening

butter

Page 12: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

12

Acids, Bases, Buffers

Acids release H+ in solution

Bases release OH- in solution

Buffers resist changes in pH

pHyrion paper

Page 13: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

13

pH scale

Page 14: 1 Unit 2: BIOMOLECULES, Part 1 INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Atomic structure and the periodic table Bonds – ionic, covalent (and hydrogen) Solubility and polarity,

14

Biological systems depend on buffers

Narrow tolerances to changes in pH

Acid rain alters pH of soils and aquatic ecosystems

Limestone is used as a buffer in acidified lakes