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Chemistry of Life Biology Chapter 2

Chemistry of Life

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Chemistry of Life. Biology Chapter 2. Elements. Substances that cannot be broken down chemically into simpler kinds of matter More than 100 types Organized on the periodic table of elements. Elements of Life. Approximately 27 are essential to life - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chemistry of Life

Chemistry of Life

Biology Chapter 2

Page 2: Chemistry of Life

Elements

• Substances that cannot be broken down chemically into simpler kinds of matter

• More than 100 types• Organized on the

periodic table of elements

Page 3: Chemistry of Life

Elements of Life

• Approximately 27 are essential to life• 90% of mass of living things are O, C, H, N• Elements of Life: CHONPS• Remember the Elephants in the Element

Song?

Page 4: Chemistry of Life

Atom

• Smallest unit of an element that retains all the properties of that element

Page 5: Chemistry of Life

Nucleus

• Central region of an atom• Contains the bulk of the mass of the atom• Consists of protons and neutrons

Page 6: Chemistry of Life

Proton

• Positively charged particle• Located in Nucleus• Mass approximately 1 AMU

http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/doctrine/dod/fm8-9/fig2-I.gifhttp://images.thecarconnection.com/med/proton-logo_100378711_m.jpg

Page 7: Chemistry of Life

Neutron

• Neutral charged particle, No Charge• Located in Nucleus• Mass approximately 1 AMU

http://www.chem4kids.com/files/art/atom_struct1.gif

http://d1jqu7g1y74ds1.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/c-atom_e1.gif

http://www.chem4kids.com/files/art/atom_neutron1.gif

Page 8: Chemistry of Life

Electron

• Negatively charged particle• Orbits the nucleus in the electron cloud• Mass practically zero

Page 9: Chemistry of Life

Orbitals

• Electrons orbit in specific regions called orbitals-

• 3D space higher probability location of orbital• Each orbital is associated with an energy level• Electrons in orbitals further from the nucleus

have more energy

Page 10: Chemistry of Life

Electron Orbitals & Energy Levels

• Each orbital can hold 2 electrons• Each energy level consists of different #s of

orbitals

http://quantumnumbers.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/2/1/12213482/8009912_orig.jpeg

Page 12: Chemistry of Life

Atomic Number

• Number of protons in an atom • Determines type of element• Elements are organized by atomic number on

the periodic table• Atomic Number for Carbon is 6

Page 13: Chemistry of Life
Page 14: Chemistry of Life

Mass Number

• Total number of Protons + Neutrons

• Protons have mass of 1 amu

• Neutrons have mass of 1 amu

• Mass Number – Atomic Number = # of neutrons

http://www.sawyerscience.com/assets/images/units/unit_2/atomic_Mass.jpg

Page 15: Chemistry of Life

Mass Number

http://chemwiki.ucdavis.edu/@api/deki/files/8320/He_Atom.png

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-DFx20P3q3fw/TciZDNxjLQI/AAAAAAAAACU/BsGwZgYExOM/s1600/isotopes.jpg

Page 16: Chemistry of Life

Compounds

• Made of atoms of two or more elements in fixed proportions

• Chemical formula shows kinds and proportions of atoms

• H2O -

• C6H12O6 –

• CO2- • CO - • O2- Compound?

Page 17: Chemistry of Life

Molecule

• Simplest part of a substance that retains all properties of that substance

• Can exist in a free state• Can be very large- carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic

acids (macromolecules)• H2O -

• C6H12O6 –

• CO2- • CO - • O2-

Page 18: Chemistry of Life

Chemical Bonds

• Attractive forces that hold atoms together• Covalent Bonds• Ionic Bonds• Hydrogen Bonds

Stable Atom = Highest energy level filled

Page 19: Chemistry of Life

Valence Electrons

• Number of electrons in the highest energy level for that atom

• Atoms are more stable when outer energy level is full (2 or 8 electrons depending on element)

Page 20: Chemistry of Life
Page 21: Chemistry of Life

Dot Diagrams

• Show the valence electrons on an atom• Hydrogen and helium only hold up to 2

valence electrons• Other elements (that we will look at) hold up

to 8 valence electrons

http://webgenchem.com/lewishcn.gifhttp://legacy.jyi.org/volumes/volume3/issue1/features/peterson.html

Page 22: Chemistry of Life

Covalent Bond

• Two atoms share one or more pairs of electrons

http://faculty.clintoncc.suny.edu/faculty/michael.gregory/files/bio%20101/bio%20101%20lectures/chemistry/chemistr.htm

Page 23: Chemistry of Life

Ion

• Some atoms only need to gain or lose 1 or 2 electrons to be stable

• Ions- Forms of an atom that have gained or lost electrons

• Fills the outer shell of electrons• If electrons are gained, Ion is NEGATIVE

(ANION)• If electrons are lost, Ion is POSITIVE (CATION)

Page 24: Chemistry of Life

Ion Example

• Sodium and Chlorine

Page 25: Chemistry of Life

Ionic Bonding

• Atoms form ions and become positive or negative

• Opposite charges attract