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Aqueous Reactions
Aqueous Reactions

... Aqueous reactions are reactions that take place in water. To understand them, it is important to understand how compounds behave in water. Some compounds are electrolytes- they dissociate into separate ions in water. However, not all electrolytes behave the same way. Some are strong electrolytes, an ...
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Thermochemistry and calorimetry
Thermochemistry and calorimetry

... The most common types of calorimeters contain a known quantity of water which absorbs the heat released by the reaction. Because the specific heat capacity of water (4.184 J g–1 K–1) is known to high precision, a measurement of its temperature rise due to the reaction enables one to calculate the qu ...
- Department of Chemistry, York University
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... (NH2CH2COOH)H+ +CH3COOH(CH3CONHCH2COOH)H++H2O protonated N-acetyl-glycine (CH3CONHCH2COOH)H+ + NH2OH  no (clusters) (NH2CH2CONHCH2COOH)H+ + H2O Fe+CH3CONHCH2COOH + NH2OH  ? (too complicated) Fe+NH2CH2CONHCH2COOH + H2O diglycine, a dipeptide M+(Gly)n + CH3COOH + NH2OH  M+(Gly)n+1 + H2O (M+ assemb ...
Chapter 7. Statistical Mechanics page 491
Chapter 7. Statistical Mechanics page 491

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Week 7 - Acid-base, redox
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... Cu(s) was oxidized because its oxidation number increased (or it lost electrons). Ag+ was reduced because its oxidation number decreased (or it gained electrons). When we use the term agent, such as oxidizing agent or reducing agent, it means the effect one chemical has on the other. As a result, co ...
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... 1. A compound called cadaverine is formed by action of bacteria on meat and fish. Analysis shows that the elemental composition is C 58.8% , H 13.8 % and N 27.4 %. Determine the empirical formula. Show all formulas and work to get full credit. – 6 points. C= 58.8/12.01= 4.89/1.96=2.5 x 2=5 ...
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... Recall from Chem 161 (Sec. 4.5 in Silberberg), the oxidation number of an atom is the ―apparent‖ charge the atom would have if each of its bonding electrons were assigned to the more electronegative atom in each bond. Oxidation numbers are useful in determining the substance oxidized (L.E.O. = Loss ...
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... PCl3 (g) + Cl2 (g)  PCl5 (g) Suppose a reaction vessel contained these three gases at the following concentrations: [PCl3] = 0.0520 M, [Cl2] = 0.0140 M, [PCl5] = 0.00600 M. Is the system in the state of equilibrium? If not which direction will the reaction have to proceed to reach equilibrium? ANS: ...
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all practice examples

... A piece of titanium metal with a mass of 20.8 g is heated in boiling water to 99.5 °C and then dropped into a coffee-cup calorimeter containing 75.0 g of water at 21.7 °C. When thermal equilibrium is reached, the final temperature is 24.3 °C. Calculate the specific heat capacity of titanium. (Specif ...
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Bioorthogonal chemistry



The term bioorthogonal chemistry refers to any chemical reaction that can occur inside of living systems without interfering with native biochemical processes. The term was coined by Carolyn R. Bertozzi in 2003. Since its introduction, the concept of the bioorthogonal reaction has enabled the study of biomolecules such as glycans, proteins, and lipids in real time in living systems without cellular toxicity. A number of chemical ligation strategies have been developed that fulfill the requirements of bioorthogonality, including the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between azides and cyclooctynes (also termed copper-free click chemistry), between nitrones and cyclooctynes, oxime/hydrazone formation from aldehydes and ketones, the tetrazine ligation, the isocyanide-based click reaction, and most recently, the quadricyclane ligation.The use of bioorthogonal chemistry typically proceeds in two steps. First, a cellular substrate is modified with a bioorthogonal functional group (chemical reporter) and introduced to the cell; substrates include metabolites, enzyme inhibitors, etc. The chemical reporter must not alter the structure of the substrate dramatically to avoid affecting its bioactivity. Secondly, a probe containing the complementary functional group is introduced to react and label the substrate.Although effective bioorthogonal reactions such as copper-free click chemistry have been developed, development of new reactions continues to generate orthogonal methods for labeling to allow multiple methods of labeling to be used in the same biosystems.
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