* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Study Guide
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
SMS+TMSC Middle School Science Chemistry 2016-17 Study Guide Test on Tue Jan 24, 2017 Grade 8 - Biochemistry & Lab Work This is only a framework - refer to teachernotes, lab sheets and your own notes! Vocabulary ester - a chemical made from combining a carbon-based acid and an alcohol. acid - a chemical that donates H+ (hydrogen ions or protons). base - a chemical that donates OH- (hydroxide ions). alcohol - a hydrocarbon with an added OH group. prefixes - the first part of a hydrocarbon name that tells you how many carbons are in it: meth=1 eth=2 prop=3, but=4, pent, hex, hept, oct, etc... hydrocarbon - a chemical made of linked carbon and hydrogen molecules. alkane - a hydrocarbon that contains only single bonds alkene - a hydrocarbon that contains double bonds alkyne - a hydrocarbon that contains triple bonds aliphatic - a hydrocarbon with the carbons linked in a chain. aromatic - a hydrocarbon with the carbons linked in a ring. Concepts Carbon (valance 4) can combine with a wide variety of other elements. It can form chains or rings with other carbon atoms. This leads to sugars, fatty acids, amino acids and nucleic acids. Carbons in a chain are termed ALIPHATIC Carbons in a rings are termed AROMATIC Hydrocarbons are named for the number of carbon atoms in them and the types of bonds. 1 carbon with hydrogens on each of the 4 valance sites is called methane: METH=1 and alkANE = single bonds. 2 carbons with a double bond is ethane: ETH=2, alkENE = double bonds. See the table in the TeacherNotes. Each compound has different characteristics. Propane (3 carbons, single bonds) is grill gas. Polyproplyene (a repeating chain of 3-carbons with double bonds) is the polymer used in fleece and water bottles. For a given hydrocarbon, you can add an OH group to it and you have created an alcohol. Propane can be made into propanol, used as rubbing alcohol. Aromatics are ring-based, the first important one was benzoic acid, from which benzene was made. Kekule uncovered the structure of benzene only after a daydream where he saw the “ouroboros” symbol of a snake eating its tail. Sugars are single or double ring carbohydrates that taste sweet and provide calories. Monosaccharides are single ring, disaccharides are double rings and polysaccharides have three or more sugar rings. Starches are food starch (amylose) or fiber (cellulose). They have hundreds of repeating sugar parts. Humans digest amylose as soon as they enter the mouth with an enzyme in saliva known as amylase. Fatty Acids add carboxylic acid to a carbon chain. They are the building blocks of fats and oils. Amines add NH2 to carbon molecules. These can be changed into amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. Nucleic acids start with rings containing carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. They add a sugar and a backbone containing phosphates to form DNA, tRA and mRNA. DNA is a helical molecule with two strands. mRNA is a messenger molecule that moves the genetic code from the DNA in the nucleus out to the cell. tRNA transfers the code to a series of amino acids. Carbon-based acids can be reacted with alcohols to create a new compound, ester, and water. Esters are chemicals responsible for many of the food smells you enjoy. By picking the right acid and alcohol, you can make artificial “flavors” even though you actually don’t taste them, you smell them. Labs Oxidation Lab We started with steel (iron and carbon, coated with oil) wool. We placed it in water, and watched... little to nothing happened, as the steel is designed not to react well with other compounds. We added rubbing alcohol that helped interrupt the protective role of the oil in the steel. We added salt. We saw limited color change as the iron and salt promoted the exchange of oxygen into the iron to form iron oxide (rust). We added hydrogen peroxide, that had more oxygen available than water and saw rapid oxidation and formation of rust. This reaction also sheds heat, so the temperature odf the mixture rose. Iron powder and salt are also in “Hot Hands” hand warmer packets. By opening the sealed bag you add air and moisture to the mix, allowing for rapid rusting and the release of heat.