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Chemistry Fundamentals Life is Chemical

Chemistry Notes

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Page 1: Chemistry Notes

ChemistryFundamentals

Life is Chemical

Page 2: Chemistry Notes

Atoms vs Molecules

• Smallest unit of matter is the Atom or the Molecule– Atoms have only 1

element– Molecules have more

than 1 kind of element joined together chemically

Page 3: Chemistry Notes

Periodic Table of the Elements

• Single type of atom

• 92 naturally occurring, humans have made a few more

Page 4: Chemistry Notes

Atomic Symbols

• 1 or 2 letters representing the atom– C – Carbon– H – Hydrogen– O – Oxygen– N – Nitrogen

• Most commonly occurring elements in Biology!

Page 5: Chemistry Notes

Molecule

• Various types of atoms joined together to make a substance that does not resemble the two elements

• Hydrogen – gas• Oxygen – gas• Water - liquid

Page 6: Chemistry Notes

Representing Molecules

• Chemical Formula use chemical symbols and numbers to represent a compound

H2O

• Structural Formula uses chemical symbols and lines to represent

a compound

Page 7: Chemistry Notes

Ex: Glucose

• Chemical Formula C6H12O6

• Structural Formula

Page 8: Chemistry Notes

Chemical Bonds

• Atoms combine to form molecules by sharing or trading electrons and forming links between them.

Page 9: Chemistry Notes

Bonding

• Chemical bonds are very stable– Forming a bond

stores energy

– Breaking a bond releases energy

KEY IDEA!!!

Page 10: Chemistry Notes

Octet Rule

• The number of bonds depends on the number of electrons in the valence (outermost) shell

• Valence Electrons = Those electrons in the outermost shell/ring of the atom

• All atoms like to form an octet (exception of Hydrogen,which likes 2)

Page 11: Chemistry Notes

Octet Rule Practice Element # Valence

Electrons# needed? # bonds?

Carbon 4

Hydrogen 1

Oxygen 6

Nitrogen 5

Page 12: Chemistry Notes

Biochemistry

Chemistry of Biology

Page 13: Chemistry Notes

Organic Vs Inorganic Molecules

• Organic Molecules – occur in living things• Generally larger and more complicated in

shape than inorganic molecules

• Always have Carbon & Hydrogen• Usually have Oxygen• Sometimes have Nitrogen

CHON

Page 14: Chemistry Notes

Four types of Organic Molecules

Type Use Look For

Parts Found

Protein

Carbohydrate

Lipid

Nucleic Acid

Page 15: Chemistry Notes

Four types of Organic Molecules

Type Use Look For

Parts Found

Protein Building block

Nitrogen Amino acid Meats

Carbohydrate

Lipid

Nucleic Acid

Page 16: Chemistry Notes

Protein

Page 17: Chemistry Notes

Four types of Organic Molecules

Type Use Look For

Parts Found

Protein Building block

Nitrogen Amino acid Meats

Carbohydrate Energy 5/6 carbon ring

Glucose Sugar/ starch

Lipid

Nucleic Acid

Page 18: Chemistry Notes

Carbohydrates

Page 19: Chemistry Notes

Four types of Organic Molecules

Type Use Look For

Parts Found

Protein Building block

Nitrogen Amino acid Meats

Carbohydrate Energy 5/6 carbon ring

Glucose Sugar/ starch

Lipid Cell Membrane, Organ protection Energy Storage

“E” shape Glycerol and Fatty Acids

Fats/ waxes

Nucleic Acid

Page 20: Chemistry Notes

Lipid

Page 21: Chemistry Notes

Unsaturated vs Saturated Fatty Acids

Page 22: Chemistry Notes

Unsaturated vs Saturated Fats

Page 23: Chemistry Notes

Four types of Organic Molecules

Type Use Look For

Parts Found

Protein Building block

Nitrogen Amino acid Meats

Carbohydrate Energy 5/6 carbon ring

Glucose Sugar/ starch

Lipid Cell Membrane, Organ protection Energy Storage

“E” shape Glycerol and Fatty Acids

Fats/ waxes

Nucleic Acid Information Storage “blueprints”

3 parts Phosphate, 5 carbon sugar and nitrogen base

DNA

Page 24: Chemistry Notes

Nucleic Acid

Page 25: Chemistry Notes

DNA

Page 26: Chemistry Notes

Making Chains

Single Unit Chain

Amino Acid Protein

Carbohydrate Starch

Nucleic Acid DNA

Page 27: Chemistry Notes

Monomer vs Polymer

Page 28: Chemistry Notes

Monomer vs Polymer

Monomer (Single Unit) Polymer (Long Chain)

Amino Acid Polypeptide or Protein

Carbohydrate Disaccharide, Trisaccharide, Polysaccharide or Starch

Page 29: Chemistry Notes

Dehydration Synthesis and Hydrolysis

Page 30: Chemistry Notes

• Dehydration Synthesis– Remove water to form long chains

• Simple sugars into starches

• Hydrolysis– Add water to break chains

• Polysaccharides into monosaccharides

Page 31: Chemistry Notes

Lipids: A Special Case

• Not a polymer, but still use dehydration synthesis.

Page 32: Chemistry Notes