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• Subatomic particle Charge Location proton + nucleus neutron none nucleus electron surrounds nucleus Atomic number (#)= number of protons (=number of electrons in neutral atom) Mass number (AM)= number of protons + number of neutrons Macroelements- need large quantities 6 elements make up 98% by mass C, H, N, O, P, S Microelements (or trace elements)Need very small amounts but critical!! ex. Selenium (Se) is an antioxidant that helps prevent cell damage from free radicals, also help thyroid function and boost immune system Radioactive Isotopes: nucleus decays Used in medical research Compounds are different from the elements that make them up!! Properties of atoms due to: electronegativity valence electrons configuration size Ex. Ions • Bonds (ionic and covalent)- lose, gain or share electrons in order to fill valence shell (stability) – All atoms want 8 e- in their outermost shell Due to electronegativity! •Ionic- >1.7 •Polar covalent- 0.4- 1.7 •Covalent- < 0.4 • Hydrogen bondsattraction of H to partial negative charge (due to polar covalent bonds between oxygen and hydrogen) Hydrogen with oxygen, nitrogen, etc. Degrade with heat, Change in pH, or Chemical treatments! Weak bondStrong force And remember: Structure determines Function!!!!! Should we control a chemical that: •Causes excessive sweating and vomiting. •Is a major component in acid rain. •Can cause severe burns in its gaseous state. •Accidental inhalation can kill you. •Contributes to erosion. •Decreases the effectiveness of car brakes. •Has been found in tumors of terminal cancer patients. What is the chemical? Dihydrogen monoxide H2O H+ + OH- Pure water ion conc. Is 10-7 M Adding solutes disrupts balance Acid- adds H+ Base- reduces H+ (adds OH-) •Log based •Acids pH <7 •Neutral pH=7 •Base pH >7 •[H+] + [OH-] = 14 •Properties of both acid and base •Resist pH shifts •Very important in living organisms! 2006- The movement of water through vascular plants is important to their survival. a. Explain the mechanism of water movement through vascular plants during transpiration. Include a discussion of how the anatomy of vascular plants and the properties of water contribute to this process. 2003B- Water is important for all living organisms. The functions of water are directly related to its physical properties a. Describe how the properties of water contribute to TWO of the following * transpiration * thermoregulation in endotherms * plasma membrane structure Forms 4 covalent bonds Bonds easily to itself! Tetrahedral molecular shape Structural Enantiomers Geometric Built of monomers (subunits) Water removed •Makes covalent bonds (stores energy) •Joins two monomers Water added Breaks bonds (releases energy) 2003B- Water is important for all living organisms. The functions of water are directly related to its physical properties. b. Water serves as a reactant and a product in the carbon cycle. Discuss the role of water in the carbon cycle. •C, H, O in 1:2:1 ratio •Used for fuel, structure, and receptors •Simple or complex •Storage and structure •Hydrophobic •C, H, O components- high in C •High in energy •Fats solid, oils liquid •Made of fatty acids and glycerol •“Full”- no double bonds •Straight chained •Solid •Found in fats •One or more C=C bonds (can accept more H •Bent chains •Liquid •Found in oils •Energy storage, insulation, cushions organs •Only 2 fatty acids •Hydrophilic head, hydrophobic tail •Membrane bilayers •Four fused rings with functional groups •Ex. Cholesterol and hormones Peptide bond • C, H, O, N, sometimes S • Molecular tools • Structure, enzymes, antibodies Transport, movement, receptors, hormones • Chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds •Gives protein its properties •Made of nucleotides (nitrogen base, pentose sugar, phosphate) •Informational •C, H, O, N, P •Deoxyribose •Double stranded •Thymine •Makes up genes •Ribose •Single stranded •Uracil •Structure and protein synthesis “Spontaneous” Not “Spontaneous”