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® DEMYSTIFYING EVERYDAY CHEMISTRY OCTOBER 2011 LIVING ON SOLAR p.POWER! 8 Students Compete to Build the Best Solar Home in the Solar Decathlon, p.10 Demystifiying Gross Stuff, p.12 How Artificial Sweeteners Work, p.15 Production Team Patrice Pages, Editor Cornithia Harris, Art Director Therese Geraghty, Copy Editor NEWS Administrative Team Marta Gmurczyk, Administrative Editor Peter Isikoff, Administrative Associate Teacher’s Guide William Bleam, Editor Donald McKinney, Editor Erica K. Jacobsen, Editor Ronald Tempest, Editor Susan Cooper, Content Reading Consultant David Olney, Puzzle Contributor Education Division Mary Kirchhoff, Director Terri Taylor, Assistant Director, K–12 Science Policy Board Ami LeFevre, Chair, Skokie, IL Shelly Belleau, Thornton, CO Steve Long, Rogers, AR Mark Meszaros, Rochester, NY Ingrid Montes, San Juan, Puerto Rico ChemMatters (ISSN 0736–4687) is published four times a year (Oct., Dec., Feb., and April) by the American Chemical Society at 1155 16th St., NW, Washington, DC 20036–4800. Periodicals postage paid at Washington, DC, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to ChemMatters Magazine, ACS Office of Society Services, 1155 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036. Subscriber Information Prices to the United States, Canada, and Mexico: $14.00 per subscription. Inquire about bulk, other foreign rates, and back issues at ACS Office of Society Services, 1155 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036; 800-227-5558 or 202-872-6067 fax. Information is also available online at http://chemistry.org/education/ The American Chemical Society assumes no responsibility for the statements and opinions advanced by contributors. Views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the American Chemical Society. The activities in ChemMatters are intended for high school students under the direct supervision of teachers. The American Chemical Society cannot be responsible for any accidents or injuries that may result from conducting the activities without proper supervision, from not specifically following directions, from ignoring the cautions contained in the text, or from not following standard safe laboratory practices. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, now known or later developed, including but not limited to electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior permission from the copyright owner. Requests for permission should be directed in writing to ChemMatters, American Chemical Society, 1155 16th St., NW, Washington, DC 20036– 4800; 202-833-7732 fax. Want to have a blast while exploring chemistry? Several thousand student members of more than 350 American Chemical Society (ACS) ChemClubs located throughout the United States and Puerto Rico do just that during the school year. Any high school can start an ACS ChemClub—all it takes is an advisor, a group of interested students, and the support of your school. ACS offers tons of free resources to active, chartered Clubs, such as demonstrations, experiments, and other activities to try, along with bonus items such as T-shirts and copies of ChemMatters, the magazine you are reading now. What do ChemClub students do? They participate in activities during and after school, get involved in community building, learn about chemistry careers, enjoy social events, and learn how chemistry plays a role in our everyday lives. Last year, ChemClub students used liquid nitrogen to make their own Dippin’ Dots ice cream at a holiday party, raised money to purchase water purification packets to send to third-world countries so children there can have safe drinking water, and created a Halloween Haunted Hall with a chemistry theme for the community. courtesy of terri campbell Students from Dr. Pedro Perea Fajardo School having fun with chemistry demonstrations. This fall, ChemClub members will join thousands of students around the world as they participate in the International Year of Chemistry (IYC) Global Water Experiment. They can try one or more of four experiChemClub students from Valley Central High ments, testing the acidity School in Montgomery, N.Y., created a periodic and salinity of water samples they collect, table out of cupcakes, with atomic symbols made building a water filtration unit, and designing with either icing or candy. a solar still. Then, they will report their results to the IYC Web site (http://water.chemistry2011.org/web/iyc). Interested in helping to start a ChemClub at your school? Want to learn more? Find more information about ACS ChemClubs at: http://www.acs.org/chemclub. © Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society Canadian GST Reg. No. 127571347 Printed in the USA www.acs.org/chemmatters courtesy of evelyn lopez Technical Review Seth Brown, University of Notre Dame David Voss, Medina High School, Barker, NY ® Vol. 29, No. 3 OCTOBER 2011 DEPARTMENTS Did You Know? 4 How dental braces straighten teeth; the amazing properties of microfibers. Open for Discussion: Lithium-Ion Batteries: A Clean Source of Energy? By Barbara Sitzman and Regis Goode 6 5 Lithium-ion batteries power computers, iPods, and hybrid cars. But where does lithium come from? Are these batteries safe for the environment? 5 By Gail Kay Haines rstock 6 shutte Sugar in the Blood Boosts Energy istock FEATURES Where do you get the energy you need to read, think, or jog? It all comes down to a sugar molecule, glucose, which you produce from the digestion of food. Harnessing Solar Power By Michael Tinnesand 10 8 In the United States, the main source of energy is fossil fuels, but solar energy is a promising alternative. How do we collect this energy and use it to produce electricity? Students Build Solar Homes By Michael Tinnesand 10 Every other year, students compete to build the world’s best solar homes. Check out what students have achieved in 2009 and what they will showcase this year at the Solar Decathlon in Washington, D.C. By Brian Rohrig 12 What’s behind acne, smelly breath, flatulence? Bacteria and chemistry. The Skinny on Sweeteners: How Do They Work? 15 SHUTTERSTOCK Demystifying Gross Stuff Stefano Paltera/U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon Check out the video podcasts on acne and bad breath at: www.acs.org/chemmatters 12 Spanish translation available online! By Christen Brownlee Splenda, Equal, Sweet’N Low… Why are these artificial sweeteners calorie-free sugar substitutes? Are they healthy? Fighting Bacteria By Margaret Orford Antibiotics are becoming less effective at killing bacteria as experienced by Eric, 15, who recently had pneumonia and realized it was caused by a resistant strain of bacteria. 17 TEACHERS! find your complete: teacher’s guide for this issue at www.acs.org/chemmatters On the cover: University of maryland students work to install the green roof modules on the university of maryland solar decathlon entry. courtesy of Jeff gipson/maryland. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 3 DID YOU KNOW?... DID YOU KNOW?... Structure of Matter: How Dental Braces Straighten Teeth Polymers: The Amazing Properties of Microfibers M M 4 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 goes into the martensite phase, forming a more pliable, bendable crystal structure. The atoms stay attached to one another, and the crystal deforms without breaking. When the material is heated to 60 °C, the atoms return to the more rigid austenite phase. An orthodontist—a dentist who specializes in correcting both photos from istock any teens have braces to straighten crooked teeth or correct an overbite—the overlapping of the lower teeth by the upper teeth. The metal used for the wire in braces is called memory metal because it “remembers” a shape and returns to it under the right conditions. Memory metal, an alloy of nickel and titanium, was developed in 1965. Alloys are mixtures of metal atoms that do not react with one another but exist side by side. William J. Buehler, a scientist at a research facility from the U.S. Navy called the Navy Ordnance Laboratory, prepared strips of a nickel-titanium alloy that could be bent into folds and then stretched back into a straight piece. The alloy was called Nitinol, for nickel, titanium, and the Navy Ordnance Laboratory. We know the common three phases of matter: solid, liquid, and gas. But Nitinol has two solid phases called the austenite and the martensite phases. As the temperature rises, it changes from one to the other. These phases may look similar, but the atomic structure in each phase is actually different. In the austenite phase, the atoms of titanium are in the center of a cube of nickel atoms, forming a rigid and inflexible structure. As the alloy cools, it misalignment of teeth—shapes the Nitinol wire to the shape desired for your teeth. The Nitinol is heated to about 550 °C. It goes into the austenite phase, which keeps the original shape of the teeth. Then, as it cools, the wire moves into the martensite phase, so it becomes flexible enough for the orthodontist to place it in your mouth and attach it to brackets. The heat of your mouth makes the wire go back to the austenite phase and the original shape. As the wire strains to move into the original shape, it pulls your teeth into the desired places—the ones which will give you a beautiful smile of straight teeth. —Roberta Baxter www.acs.org/chemmatters icrofibers are synthetic fabrics that are exceptionally strong yet contain very thin fibers—four times thinner than wool fiber and three times thinner than cotton fiber. They are used for cleaning purposes because they are soft and do not scratch, and they can easily remove dirt and dust without using chemicals. Microfibers are also used to make clothes that feel soft and have an amazing property: They can wick away moisture from your skin in the summer and keep you warm in the winter. Microfibers wick moisture away by absorbing as much as seven times their weight in moisture. Cotton, for example, soaks up water by absorbing it. By contrast, microfibers pull water away from your skin to a drier part of the fabric. If you wear a T-shirt made with microfibers, it will pull sweat away to keep you cooler during a workout and will pull rainwater away from your skin if you get caught in a downpour. Microfibers are made of polymers—long chain-like molecules that consist of repeating units strung like beads on a thread. They wick moisture because water molecules pull on each other, so as one molecule moves, the nearby molecules are pulled along. So, water molecules that come from either sweat or rain are taken away from the wet sections of the fabric to the drier ones. This way, your skin stays dry. Microfibers can also keep you warm. The small diameter of the fiber allows shutterstock air pockets to form in the fabric. The trapped air provides insulation, keeping you warm. The light weight of the fabric and the insulation quality has made microfibers a hit for jackets, gloves, boots, and hats. Microfibers are elastic, making them suitable for underwear. They are also used in sheets, blankets, and bed coverings. Microfibers can be made into an imitation leather called Ultrasuede that is cheaper and easier to clean than suede leather, which is made from the underside of the animal skin. So, if you have never worn or used fabric made with microfibers, you may want to give it a try! —Roberta Baxter OPEN FOR DISCUSSION By Barbara Sitzman and Regis Goode through the molten lithium chloride to supply electrons to Li ions, reducing them to lithium metal and producing chlorine gas: 2 LiCl(s) ➔ 2Li(s) + Cl2(g). Unfortunately, the mining and refining of lithium mars the landscape and produces wastes that could damage the environment, but since lithium atoms are light and can produce more energy per pound, less of the material is needed. B: Another problem is that the majority of known lithium deposits are outside the United States. This may have some serious political implications. Some of the largest reserves are located in Bolivia, Chile, Australia, Argentina, and China. Does this mean that we will be dependent upon foreign sources? Will some of these countries become the next “Saudi Arabia of Lithium”? To address these questions, U.S. scientists and car manufacturers are looking at deposits within the United States. R: Let’s look at how lithiumion batteries work. Compared to other batteries, they can store more energy for their size and weight and operate at a higher voltage and at a lower current than regular AA batteries. One Li cell can produce the same voltage as multiple AA cells. Lithium-ion batteries also have a lower self-discharge rate, so once they are charged they retain their charge longer. This is called having “high power density.” A lithium-ion battery operates using the process of oxidation- reduction (Redox), in which one substance loses electrons (oxidation) to another substance that gains the electrons (reduction). By controlling the flow of these electrons, electricity is generated. In a lithium-ion battery, the cathode (the place where reduction occurs) is generally made of lithium-cobalt oxide (LiCoO2), and the anode (where oxidation occurs) is coated with graphite (carbon). A “separator” between the cathode and the anode allows ions to pass through. These components are submerged in a solution that conducts a current called electrolyte. While the battery charges, the energy going in forces lithium ions to move through the electrolyte to the anode, where they attach to the carbon. When the battery is in use, the lithium ions move back to the cathode, stranding electrons on the anode. These electrons must take the long way back through the circuit, creating an electrical current. B: It is important to remember that the recharging of the batteries requires electricity produced by burning coal in power plants. This produces carbon dioxide (CO2), a greenhouse gas, so using batteries is not completely emission-free. R: I agree, but battery-operated cars have no direct emissions. Since electric cars are not burn- © 2006 howstuffworks, inc. Barbara: Hi, Regis. Do you know what allows us to talk to our friends, stay in touch with the world, and save petroleum resources? Well, it’s right there on the periodic table, element number 3. Regis: You are right. Lithium (Li) is the major component of modern batteries. It powers our computers, iPods, cameras, electronic games, and hybrid (gasoline-electric) cars. I wonder if it is truly a clean energy source. Let’s open this up for discussion. B: The unique properties of this element make it just what we need to power tiny cell phones and electric cars. Lithium, with the lowest density of any solid element, can pack three times more energy per pound than older batteries. What is involved in obtaining the pure eleck to rs ment? te ut sh R: Lithium, like other alkali metals, is too reactive to exist as a pure metal in nature. It is found combined in various minerals and in brine deposits that contain mostly salt. Lithium can be extracted by evaporating salty pools filled by rivers that have washed over lithium-containing rocks. As the water evaporates, the lithium crystallizes as ionic salts, usually lithium chloride and lithium carbonate. As with other very active metals, pure lithium can be produced by electrolysis. In this process, an electric current is passed shutterstock Lithium-Ion Batteries: A Clean Source of Energy? ing gasoline, a fossil fuel, they do not directly produce CO2. And since they do not burn fossil fuels, they are not consuming a nonrenewable resource. This helps reduce our dependence on foreign oil. B: Having said that, there are always environmental issues to consider, even in what is described as clean energy. Mining and refining lithium certainly have hidden environmental issues, ranging from destroying the landscape during the mining process to producing emissions during refining. R: So, all energy has a cost. As we look to the future and scientifically evaluate new technologies, should we consider the actual “cleanliness” of each energy source? What do you think? Let us know by contacting us at: [email protected]. Barbara Sitzman and Regis Goode are high school chemistry teachers at Granada Hills Charter High School, Granada Hills, Calif., and Ridge View High School, Columbia, S.C., respectively. Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 5 Sugar in the Blood Boosts istock By Gail Kay Haines all figures by anthony fernandez W hoa! You skid into a parking space at the far end of the lot, with minutes to get to your firstperiod chemistry exam. Foot speed, then brain surge required, full power. Next stop: physical education, with time trials for running the mile. Breakfast is fading, and it’s another hour to lunch. How do you get the energy for so much activity? Energy is already cruising through your bloodstream as you read, think, or run around the track. One special sugar serves as nature’s little battery pack—glucose. It is the primary energy storage molecule used by all living beings. People need about a teaspoon of glucose every 15 minutes to keep the energy going throughout their bodies. Where do you get glucose? Short answer: from plants. Plant cells take energy from the sun, add water (H2O), pick up carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air, and produce glucose (C6H12O6) and oxygen (O2). 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy (from the sun) à C6H12O6 + 6 O2 But how does your body get, store, and use glucose to supply human energy? It’s a little more complicated. 6 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 A sweet source of energy CH2 OH Glucose is a type of molecule called a carbohydrate. Carbohydrates are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and are found in fruits, vegetables, dairy products, breads, and sweets. Glucose (Fig. 1) is one of the simplest forms of carbohydrate and the most abundant carbohydrate in nature. OH CH2OH H OH O H OH H H OH OH H Figure 1. Chemical structure of glucose Glucose, which makes up about 0.1% of our blood, represents the body’s simplest, quickest source of energy. Glucose is also present in common food products, such as ordinary corn syrup—which is mainly glucose—and table sugar, in which glucose is part of a molecule called sucrose (C12H22O11) (Fig. 2). Although glucose is the body’s favorite food, we don’t usually eat it straight. Carbohydrates, which often contain glucose in chemically bound forms, such as sucrose, need to be broken down to make free glucose. Proteins can be digested and used to make glucose by a more complicated process, but usually they are used by the body as building www.acs.org/chemmatters CH2OH O O OH O OH OH CH2 OH OH Figure 2. Chemical structure of sucrose materials, not for energy. And while fats are broken down to produce energy, they are not generally used directly to make glucose. Regardless of the source of glucose, your body can use glucose immediately or store it in your liver for later use. The liver converts unneeded glucose into a molecule called glycogen (Fig. 3), which is later broken to provide glucose. So, when you are running from the parking lot to your class or in between classes, your body is using glucose from food you ate during breakfast or it is tapping glucose stored in your liver. If your breakfast plays out, thank last night’s dinner for your “A” on the chemistry exam! Some glucose spent the night as “energy on tap.” Energy from glucose Inside your body, glucose molecules move through your blood and travel to every tissue and organ. There, the glucose molecules react with oxygen molecules coming from the lungs—those that you breathe in from the air—and, through a series of chemical reactions, these molecules produce energy as well ATP + H2O à ADP + HPO42– + energy The ADP molecule is also a source of energy. With help from enzymes present in cells, it reacts with a water molecule to produce a still smaller molecule called adenosine monophosphate (AMP), which contains one phosphorus atom instead of two (Fig. 4c): all photos from istock Energy With help from enzymes present in cells, an ATP molecule reacts with a water molecule to produce a smaller molecule than ATP called adenosine diphosphate (ADP) (Fig. 4b), which contains two phosphorus atoms instead of three, along with a hydrogen phosphate ion and energy: ADP + H2O à AMP + HPO42– + energy as carbon dioxide and water. That energy ultimately allows you to walk, talk, run, and think. What happens in your body is essentially the reverse of what happens in plants: So, when you run around the track and think your way through an exam on chemical bonds, you use energy produced during these two chemical reactions. Then, the body takes energy from incoming glucose to reassemble the ATP molecules, and the cycle starts again. C6H12O6 + 6 O2 à 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy Give me a straight shot of glucose! This equation actually summarizes a sequence of more than 20 chemical reactions, and the energy (right side of the equation) is stored in small molecules called adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This molecule (Fig. 4a) is the most widely used in nature to store energy. It contains a phosphate-ion “tail” in which potential energy is stored. If glucose is the favored body and brain food, why not live on sugar? Could we live on sugar? The answer is a qualified no. First, your body requires all sorts of chemicals from food in addition to glucose—such as proteins, healthy fats, fiber, vita(a) mins, and antioxidants. Also, only a healthy body can process glucose properly. If your heart, liver, and pancreas are not working well, too much glucose H CH could lead to diabetes, a medi(b) C OH O C H O OH cal condition in which the body H C H C H C cannot make or use the glucoseH CH OH O C C OH H digesting hormone insulin. O OH H C H But recent research has C H C OH O shown that straight glucose may CH OH CH CH OH CH OH sometimes be the way to go. A H C O H H C O H H C O H H C O H H H H H study on the memory-enhancing C OH H C C OH H C C OH H C C OH H C O O O O O C C C C C C C C effect of glucose in college H OH H OH H OH H OH students was conducted by scientists at Swinburne UniverFigure 3. (a) Glycogen is made of a chain of glucose units, with sity of Technology, Melbourne, branches occurring every 8–10 units; (b) detailed chemical structure of a few glucose units in the chain. Australia. The researchers gave 2 2 2 2 2 2 H2N O O— P O P O— O P O— O N N O O O N N O — OH OH (a) H2N O O HO P O O — P N N O N N O O— OH OH (b) H2N O HO P O N N O — N N O OH OH (c) Figure 4. Chemical structures of (a) ATP, (b) ADP; and (c) AMP drinks containing glucose to undergraduate students and noticed that high doses of glucose improved their recall of words and large numbers for a 2-hour period. Now that you know how glucose is produced and used in your body, you may find it easier to decide what to eat: healthy food that will release glucose slowly or a “shot of glucose” that will spike the amount of energy in your body for a few hours. The choice is yours, but don’t be surprised by how your body reacts! Selected references Raloff, J. Brain Boosters: Some Nutritional Supplements Provide Real Food for Thought. Science News, Feb 26, 2011, 179 (5), pp 26–29: www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/ id/69708/title/Brain_Boosters [accessed July 2011]. Quinn, E. What to Eat Before Exercise. About. com: http://sportsmedicine.about.com/od/ sportsnutrition/a/EatForExercise.htm [accessed July 2011]. Gail Kay Haines is a science writer and book author from Olympia, Wash. Her most recent ChemMatters article, “Is this Water Recycled Sewage?” appeared in the February 2011 issue. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 7 © 1998-2011 howstuffworks, inc. The Utrik Atoll consists of 10 islands that are part of the Marshall Islands, a nation of atolls and islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Converting sunlight into electricity istock By Michael Tinnesand The Utrik leaders worked with Moana Marine, LLC, a local alternative energy company, to install a solar panel power system and two small wind-powered generators that produced enough electricity to power the island’s water system. Since then, the power system has been providing an abundant supply of electricity to the island’s houses and has allowed the opening of a new school, a new community center, and an agriculture nursery facility. Utrik may be a model in miniature for the fate that might await the rest of the world. In the United States, the main source of energy is fossil fuels—petroleum, natural gas, and coal. Fossil fuels contribute 85% of the energy that we need to light our homes, power 8 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 our cars, and cook our meals. But we will eventually run out of fossil fuels. Also, many countries—including the United States—need to import fossil fuels because they are found only in certain parts of the world. Another problem with fossil fuels is that burning them releases carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that contributes to global climate change. A promising alternative to fossil fuels is solar energy. The total human population on Earth currently uses about 13 terawatts (1 terawatt equals one trillion watts) of energy. This is only 0.01% of the 120,000 terawatts of energy delivered by the sun to the surface of the Earth. If we could only find a way to harness even a fraction of this solar energy, we could solve our energy problems. www.acs.org/chemmatters To produce electricity from the sun, all that is needed is a small device called a solar cell, which converts solar energy directly into electricity. To power a house or a building, solar cells are combined into modules and arrays to form solar panels (Fig. 1). Solar panels are “first cousins” to the chips inside computers or cell phones. The technology used to make solar panels is similar to making computer chips. Both use a class of material called semiconductors—materials that have a limited ability to conduct an electric current. Most semiconductors are made from crystalline silicon. In a pure silicon crystal, each silicon atom is bonded to four other silicon atoms, and each bond consists of a pair of shared electrons. This is a stable configuration. Electrons involved in these bonds move very little and are restricted to the bonds. Silicon does not conduct electricity because its electrons do not move easily. Think about a theater filled with people. If every seat is taken, nobody can move or shift for a better seat. Giff Johnson, The Marshall Islands Journal P eople have lived on Utrik Atoll for the past 4,000 years. It is a tropical paradise that is part of the Republic of the Marshall Islands, a nation of islands and atolls in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Utrik Atoll is a sanctuary for sea turtles, birds, and many species of fish. In recent times, global climate change brought drought to the region, and fresh drinking water was increasingly difficult to come by. What water they could pump from wells relied on electricity from diesel generators, but with rising fuel costs, this process was too expensive to sustain. Utrik local government technician Beasa Beasa (above right) uses a solar-powered device that dispenses fresh, clean drinking water. Electron (a) Missing electron or “hole” Gallium atom Silicon atom Silicon atom Figure 2. (a) A gallium-doped p-type silicon semiconductor; (b) an arsenic-doped n-type silicon semiconductor. Sunlight Cover glass n lectro Hole ctor e— r E ducto icon du icon e sem p-typ electricity from the electric grid—the network of power lines used to deliver electricity to houses and builde— ings—as usual. During a sunny day, the solar panels produce electricity that is used by the home, replacing electricity from the grid. If too much solar energy — is collected by the solar panels—that is, e if some of the solar energy is not used—it goes into the grid and earns the homeowner money, paid by the electric company. Perhaps the most desirable way of using solar energy is for a home or building to be totally independent of the power grid. Rather than having a net-metered link to the power grid, the solar home or building would exist “off the grid.” But what would happen during the night or on cloudy days? On sunny days, excess solar energy would be stored in large batteries and used in the absence of sunlight. An alternative is to use portable gas or diesel-powered generators to replace solar energy. With continued improvement in technology and lowered costs, chances are some day the United States will follow the model of the Utrik Atoll and put solar power to work in a big way. Transparent adhesive Antireflective coating Front contact e sem Back contact Figure 3. Schematic diagram of one layer of a solar cell, showing the n-type and p-type semiconductors. The second type of doped silicon is called n-type (n is for “negative”). It is made by including atoms that have one more electron in their outer level than does silicon (Fig. 2b). This additional electron is free to move. In our theater analogy, it is like having one seat occupied by two people. Because this is uncomfortable, one of them would hop to another seat. Extra electron free to move Arsenic atom n-typ Figure 1. Solar cells are arranged in the form of a module, which are then combined to form an array. A solar panel, such as the one shown on the roof of this house, consists of a series of arrays that are aligned next to each other. Electron (b) Electron can move into hole shutterstock.com all figures by anthony fernandez This changes if silicon is “doped.” Doping means intentionally adding a small amount of another element, called a dopant, to silicon. The first kind of doped silicon is called p-type (p is for “positive”). It is produced by introducing atoms—such as boron or gallium—that have one less electron in their outer level than does silicon (Fig. 2a). This means that instead of making four bonds of shared pairs of electrons with other silicon atoms, there is one open “hole.” This is similar to having a few empty seats in a theater. It makes shifting from one seat to another much easier. By placing a layer of p-doped silicon next to a layer of n-doped silicon, we create what is known in electronics as a p-n junction or diode (Fig. 3). Diodes control electricity by only allowing current to flow in one direction. Imagine if our theater seats in the back with two people per seat and empty seats near the front. People would migrate from the back to the front—and not in the other direction. This is what happens in a p-n junction. A solar cell is composed of many p-n junctions (Fig. 3). When a solar cell is exposed to sunlight, the small particles that make up light, called photons, enter the solar cell and knock some of its electrons loose. When these electrons are in the border region—between the n-type and p-type layers—they move from the n-type to the p-type layer. Then, a metal wire collects these electrons and returns them to the back of the n-type layer through an external circuit, creating a flow of electricity. Selected References On and off the grid Solar 101: How Solar Works, SolarWorld-USA: http://www.solarworld-usa.com/solar-for-home/ solar-101/history-of-solar.aspx [accessed April 2011]. Ewing, R. A.; Pratt, D. Got Sun? Go Solar: Get Free Renewable Energy to Power Your Grid-Tied Home, PixyJack Press, Masonville, CO. Walsh, B. Solar Power’s New Style, Time, June 12, 2008. A major complication of solar energy is that it can be collected only when it is sunny. To solve this problem, most residential installations use a “net-metered” system. During the night or on cloudy days, a homeowner uses Michael Tinnesand is a science writer and education consultant who lives in Portland, Ore. His latest ChemMatters article, “A Single Ignition: A Cautionary Tale,” appeared in the April 2011 issue. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 9 By Michael Tinnesand E Students Build Photos by Stefano Paltera/U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon very 4 years, the summer Olympics awards a gold medal for the decathlon. The winner becomes “the world’s greatest athlete.” After facing 2 days of grueling athletic competition in 10 events—which includes sprint races, jumps, as well as throwing a heavy disc and a long spear called a javelin—the winners have proven themselves to be “the world’s greatest.” Every other year, another competition challenges college students to build the world’s best solar homes. The students don’t have to run, jump, or throw a disc, but they have to show that their solar home can outdo other homes in 10 contests. This international event, called the Solar Decathlon, is organized by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE ) and is supported with in-kind donations from organizations such as Dow Corning, Lowe’s, M.C. Dean Inc., Pepco, and Schneider Electric. New this year is the sustaining level sponsorship from Dow Corning, a global leader in silicones and silicon-based technology. Dow Corning is sponsoring the educational partnership of this year’s event by overseeing the creation of educational resources that will strengthen understanding of solar energy and sustainability and of the importance of science, r a l o S mes o H technology, engineering, and mathematics. “There has never been a more important time to further develop viable, renewable, clean, domestically generated energy sources, and there is no better way to achieve that goal than by challenging great minds from universities all over the world,” says Robert D. Hansen, President and Chief Executive Officer of Dow Corning. “The students’ hard work is a testament to the endless possibilities attainable through math and science education.” The Solar Decathlon puts 20 teams of college students from around the world in head-to-head competition across the 10 contests (see sidebar). DOE helps get things started by giving each school a $100,000 grant. The completed house is transported to the decathlon site in Washington, D.C., and reassembled for judging and public viewing. The houses must be between 600 square feet and 1,000 square feet in size. The contests are both clever and demanding. Some are evaluated by a jury, as in gymnastics or ice skating. Other contests are determined by specific measurements, Team Germany’s solar house looked like a huge black box. 10 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 www.acs.org/chemmatters such as power consumption or total energy produced. In the remaining contests, points are awarded for the satisfactory completion of a task. In the most recent Decathlon, which was held in 2009, the winner was Team Germany, a group of students from the University of Darmstadt. Their house looked like a huge black box that intrigued the judges and the public, and drew long lines of people seeking a look inside. One of the reasons this solar house was so successful was that nearly every bit of its outside Team Illinois poses in front of their house. surface was coated with solar panels. Team Germany placed first in the Net Metering and Comfort Zone contests. Many of the solar house designs have a futuristic, spaceship look. But the team from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign took a different approach: They used reclaimed barn boards to cover their house. But underneath this traditional exterior was cutting-edge construction. The house featured 12 inches of insulation in the wall, ceiling, and floors, which allowed it to use 90% less energy than a typical construction. The team won three individual contests, including Hot Water, Appliances, and Home Entertainment. All this led to a second-place finish overall. Team California, from Santa Clara University and the California College of the Arts, finished in third place with a house made of windows, walls, and floors that collected, stored, and distributed solar energy in the form of heat in the winter and rejected solar heat in the summer. Team California placed first in the Architecture and Communications contests. The 2011 contest entries are also packed with innovative technology. An increasing number of teams are incorporating phasechange materials, which can store and release large amounts of energy. Heat is absorbed or released when the material goes from liquid to solid, solid to liquid, or other phase changes. One of the homes that use phase-change materials was designed by the team from Appalachian State University, Boone, N.C. It is made with interior walls that contain microscopic capsules filled with high-purity paraffin wax. The wax is a phase-change material that melts when enough energy is absorbed. Then, as the house cools, the wax releases its heat as it changes from liquid back to solid. Another original design comes from Team China. The team members, who are students from Tongji University in Shanghai, designed and assembled a Y-shaped house by using Visitors toured Team California’s solar-powered house on Oct. 11, 2009. Team California won first place in the Architecture contest in 2009. The 10 Contests of 2009 Appliances: Using only solar power, ensuring that a refrigerator stays cold, a freezer keeps food frozen, and clothes are washed and dried. Engineering: Functionality and efficiency of basic systems of the house, such as heating, ventilation, and air conditioning. Architecture: Look and style of the house, including size and arrangement of the various rooms in the house. Home Entertainment: Ability to hold two dinner parties and one movie night for neighbors. Comfort Zone: Inside temperature and humidity (maximum score if inside temperature between 71 °F (22.2 °C) and 76 °F (24.4 °C) and relative humidity below 60%). Communications: Presence of displays, Web sites, videos, or photos that inform the public about major features of the house and how they work. six recycled shipping containers. These cheap building materials compensate for the cost of solar cells, which cover the roof of the house. The “Y Container” house—as it is called—may score high in the “Affordability” contest, which was introduced this year and that focuses on the potential cost of the solar houses. Also, this year, all the competing houses will be connected to an extension of the electric grid—the network of power lines that delivers electricity to homes and buildings. In addition to producing electricity from solar energy, the houses will be challenged to release any electricity surplus that they produce to the grid and, as a result, to District of Columbia customers. With this new challenge, the students participating in the Solar Decathlon will push the limits of what is possible with solar energy and may pave the way for the solar house of the future. The winners of this year’s decathlon will clearly be the champions in this field, Hot Water: Ability to deliver 15 gallons (56.8 liters) of hot water (110 °F /43.3 °C) in 10 minutes or less. Lighting Design: Presence of functional, energy-efficient, and aesthetically pleasing lighting systems Market Viability: How attractive the home might be for buyers. Net Metering: How much energy the house produces and consumes. A computer-generated rendering of Team China’s Y-shaped house and only time will tell whether we can indeed call them “the world’s greatest.” Selected references Collins, G. P. et al. Seven Radical Energy Solutions, Scientific American, May 2011. Solar Decathlon, U.S. Department of Energy: http://www.solardecathlon.gov/contests.html [accessed July 2011]. Michael Tinnesand is a science writer and education consultant who lives in Portland, Ore. His latest ChemMatters article, “A Single Ignition: A Cautionary Tale,” appeared in the April 2011 issue. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 11 Courtesy of Team China The 20 teams who participated in the 2010 Solar Decathlon (distinguished by the color of their shirts) spent 2 years designing and building houses powered exclusively by the sun. Demystifying By Brian Rohrig ere is some good news for you: You can blame the sounds and odors that come from your body on bacteria. Yes, these little critters—which live on our skin, in our mouths, and in our guts—are the ones responsible for a lot of what is going on inside our bodies. Since today’s society is quite obsessed with cleanliness, we tend to be a little uptight about all these bodily sounds and smells. But understanding the science behind what may appear to be so gross may make it, well… less gross. FIGURES BY anthony fernandez. PHOTOS FROM ISTOCK ISTOCK What’s on your nose? Probably every teenager has looked in the mirror first thing in the morning to discover a ginormous zit staring back at them. And it usually makes its appearance at the worst possible time, such as the day of the prom. Your skin is porous—it is filled with millions and millions of tiny little holes, or pores. Hair grows out of pores known as follicles. In the skin, glands release an oily substance that is pale yellow and that lubricates and protects the skin (Fig. 1). This oily substance, called sebum, is one of the main causes of acne. Although it is essential to keep our skin soft and pliable and our hair shiny, too much of it can be a problem. Especially in teenagers, large levels of a sex hormone, called testosterone, are produced, 12 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 Hair Skin surface Sebum Follicle Sebaceous gland Figure 1. Sebaceous glands in the skin release an oily substance called sebum that lubricates and protects the skin. up below the surface of the skin, and die. These dead white blood cells, along with dead skin cells and some bacteria, form a white liquid known as pus. A pimple forms when the excess sebum and dead skin cells clog up and block the opening of the pore. This type of pimple is called a whitehead (Fig. 2a). Another type of pimple, called a blackhead (Fig. 2b), appears when sebum and dead skin cells clog the pore but not the opening, as in a whitehead. While the pore is clogged, its surface remains open. A blackhead appears black because melanin in the dead skin cells reacts with oxygen from the air, which changes the melanin’s color from brown to black. If the infection worsens, a painful cyst may develop under the skin. A cyst is a fluid-filled sac that is the most severe type of acne. It can cause permanent scarring. A majority of teenagers have acne, some worse than others. Washing your face with soap and water several times each day is a good way to minimize acne. which causes the skin to release a lot of sebum, too. Sometimes, this excess sebum can clog up the pores. Adding to the mix are dead skin cells. About 30,000 skin cells are shed every minute! A lot of these skin cells are shed inside the pores themselves. A blocked skin pore also contains bacteria. They feed off the dead skin cells and the clogged sebum within the pores and produce toxins that damage the lining of the pores. As these bacteria grow and multiply, they invade the area surSkin surface Skin surface rounding the pore, which can Blackhead Postule lead to a bacterial infection. Enlargement Enlargement of follicle A blocked pore initially turns of follicle opening opening red because blood rushes to Sebaceous Sebaceous gland the site, which is one of the gland ways our body responds to an Follicle Follicle infection. Then, white blood cells—a type of blood cell (a) (b) responsible for fighting infecFigure 2. Two types of pimples: (a) a whitehead; and (b) a blackhead tion—destroy bacteria, build www.acs.org/chemmatters Soap is an amphiphilic molecule: One end of the molecule binds to water molecules, while the other end binds to fat molecules, such as the ones present in sebum. These ends are called “water-loving” and “oil-loving,” respectively—hence the word “amphiphilic” (from the Greek “amphis,” meaning “both” and “philia,” meaning “love”). The reason some molecules bind to water and others to oil—and sometimes to both— is due to one key difference between water and oil, called polarity. Water is polar; oil is nonpolar. A polar molecule contains regions of partial positive and negative charge that are due to the uneven distribution of electrical charge. In the case of a water molecule, the oxygen end has a greater concentration of electrons than the two hydrogen ends because oxygen tends to attract shared electrons while hydrogen tends to lose them. So, even though the water molecule is electrically neutral, it contains a partial negative charge on the oxygen end and a partial positive charge on each of the hydrogen ends (Fig. 3). A nonpolar molecule has an even distribution of electric charge, so it has no regions of partial positive and negative charges. This is the case with an oil molecule, in which the electrons are shared equally between the molecule’s atoms. Polar molecules bind to other polar molecules or to ions. Nonpolar molecules bind to other nonpolar molecules. Polar and nonpolar molecules cannot bind with each other because one has a partial electric charge but not the other. A common component of soap is sodium stearate [CH3–(CH2)16–COONa]. When this molecule dissolves in water, it produces a stearate anion (C17 H35COO–) and a sodium cation (Na+). The stearate anion is amphiphilic: It has a negatively charged end and a long, nonpolar tail (Fig. 4). The negatively charged end binds to the electrically positive regions of water molecules, and the long tail binds to sebum molecules. Then, the soap molecules group together to form tiny spheres called micelles CH3 (CH2)16 C O— Nonpolar tail Figure 4. When dissolved in water, sodium stearate—the soap that most of us use— decomposes into an anion (top) and a cation (Na+) (not shown). The anion has a polar head that binds to water and a nonpolar tail that binds to the skin’s oily substance. It is this anion that helps clean pimples by washing away the skin’s oily substance. sive problem: bad breath. Your mouth is actually teeming with about 10 billion bacteria that take in food and excrete waste. Bacterial waste is in the form of gas, which can be pretty smelly. Bad breath is caused by the combined waste products of these bacteria. ... bacteria While you sleep, multiply like your body stops producing saliva, which crazy at contains antibacterial night, and compounds. In the your breath absence of this cleanscan smell ing liquid, bacteria Smelly breath pretty bad in multiply like crazy at the morning. If you wake up and are obsessing over night, and your breath that zit on the end of your nose, you may can smell pretty bad in not even notice a potentially more offenthe morning. During the day, your body produces up to a liter and a half of saliva, which keeps bacteria Nonpolar δ– Region in check and washes away food particles O + δ + H H H δ that may be lodged in your teeth. If you don’t δ+ δ+ O CO H O OOC δ– – δ brush your teeth before going to bed, the bac+ O δ δ+ H H H COO H teria have a lot more food particles to munch + + δ δ OOC O – δ on at night, leading to a lot of bacterial waste. δ– O One of the best ways you can prevent OILY COO δ+ δ+ H H SUBSTANCES H H breath odor—and strengthen your teeth—is δ+ δ+ OOC O by using mouthwash, which kills the bacteria δ– – δ in your mouth. One key ingredient in many O COO + δ H δ+ H + δ+ OOC H mouthwashes is fluoride, which is known to H δ – O δ COO + strengthen tooth enamel (Fig. 6). – δ δ O H C δ+ + OO H H Polar Fluoride (F–) is the ionic form of fluorine. It H+ δ δ O Region – δ forms when a fluorine atom gains an electron. Fluoride does not exist by itself, but it can be Figure 5. After binding to oily substances from the skin, sodium stearate anions pack together to form found in compounds, such as sodium fluoride a sphere called a micelle (top). The negatively (NaF), which is present in many toothpastes charged ends are in contact with water while the long tails trap the oily substances inside the micelle. and mouthwashes. When this compound is (Fig. 5). A micelle consists on the outside of the negatively charged ends attached to water molecules and on the inside of the nonpolar tails attached to sebum molecules. So, the sebum molecules are essentially stuck inside the micelles and can be washed away. But too much washing can dry out the skin, causing the skin to produce more sebum. Also, once acne has developed, no amount of washing will remove it. At that point, acne is due to a bacterial infection, and only antibacterial agents can treat it. Antibacterial substances destroy or prevent the growth of bacteria. They are available in the form of overthe-counter creams in pharmacies or are prescribed by a dermatologist. ISTOCK H δ+ O Mike ciesielski H δ+ Polar head – – – – – – – anthony fernandez δO Figure 3. In a water molecule, the electrons are shared unevenly between the oxygen end and the two hydrogen ends, creating a partial negative charge on the oxygen end and a partial negative charge on the hydrogen ends. – – – chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 13 Marie dauhenheimer Ca5(PO4)3(OH) à 5 Ca2+ + 3 PO43– + OH– A certain amount of demineralization is normal. But it is also normal for the reverse process, remineralization, to occur: 5 Ca2+ + 3 PO43– + OH– à Ca5(PO4)3(OH) If too much bacterial acid is produced, demineralization can outstrip mineralization, leading to a cavity. How does this happen? When acids are present in a solution, they dissolve to produce hydrogen ions (H+). In the mouth, as bacteria produce acids, the amount of hydrogen ions builds up. These ions combine with the hydroxide ions produced during demineralization to form water: PHOTOS.COM H+ + OH– à H2O But hydroxide ions are essential to remineralization, so their neutralization by hydrogen ions causes remineralization to slow down. The hydroxyapatite on the surface of the teeth keeps dissolving, ultimately leading to tooth decay. Fluoride ions present in mouthwashes help the enamel to remineralize. They accumulate on the surface of the enamel, thus creating a barrier that prevents bacterial acids from reaching the enamel. Also, the fluoride ions attract calcium ions, ultimately changing hydroxyapatite into fluoroapatite [Ca5(PO4)3F], which is stronger than the original hydroxyapatite. Bad breath can be caused by many different 14 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 CH2OH CH2OH gases, but two of the most common C O C H H ones are hydrogen H H sulfide (H2S) and O C C C H OH OH methyl mercaptan C C C H (CH3SH)—both sulfur-containing H H OH compounds. Other Figure 7. Chemical structure of cellulose gases that lead to bad breath are indole (C8H7N) and skatole (C9H9N), the two gases primarily responsible for the smell of feces. CH2OH O C www.acs.org/chemmatters C O C H C H OH H C C H OH H OH Passing gas Eating a lot of fiber can have an undesirable side effect: the production of large amounts of intestinal gas. When this gas is released by the body, it is known as flatulence. The gas itself is known as flatus. “Passing gas” is actually a good way to describe this process. People pass gas 14 times per day, on average. This gas is produced by bacteria in the colon. Fiber is made of a substance called cellulose (Fig. 7). Cellulose belongs to a group of materials called carbohydrates that are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and are made of a series of repeating small molecules. In the People pass case of cellulose, gas 14 times the repeating per day, on small molecule is glucose (C6H12O6) average. (Fig. 8). In the colon, bacteria break down cellulose, so if undigested food enters the colon, there is more for the bacteria to feed on. And when you have a lot of bacteria, you have a lot of their waste products in the form of gas. Foods high in fiber—such as fruits, vegetables, and beans—tend to produce a lot of flatulence. Some indigestible sugars can have the same effect. For instance, lactose in milk, which is a carbohydrate molecule (Fig. 9) formed from glucose and galac- H O C O H CH2OH H OH O H OH H H OH OH H Figure 8. Chemical structure of glucose CH2OH O HO H OH H H OH CH2OH H O O OH H OH H H OH Figure 9. Chemical structure of lactose SHUTTERSTOCK dissolved in water, the fluoride ions are free to move. Fluoride ions Dentin prevent tooth decay by strengthening the enamel. The primary comNerve pound found in tooth enamel is a strong, insoluble Figure 6. Enamel is the mineral called hard white sustance that covers a tooth. hydroxyapatite [Ca5(PO4)3(OH)]. Hydroxyapatite contains positive ions (Ca2+) and negative ions (PO43– and OH–), which are attracted to each other to form the crystalline structure of hydroxyapatite. The bacteria present on our teeth produce acids that cause hydroxyapatite to break apart—a process called demineralization: Enamel tose molecules, is sometimes not broken down completely. So, dairy products can produce a lot of flatulence, especially if a person is lactose intolerant. Once the basic chemical reactions of the body are understood, the “gross” things of your body won’t seem all that gross. On a molecular level, no one compound is grosser than any other. It’s all just chemistry! Check out the video podcasts on acne and bad breath at: www.acs.org/chemmatters Selected references Masoff, J. Oh, Yuck! The Encyclopedia of Everything Nasty, Workman Publishing: New York, 2000. Bad Breath: Unusual Causes of Halitosis. Health Tree: http://www.healthtree.com/articles/halitosis/bad-breath-causes/ [accessed July 2011]. What Causes Acne? Skin Care Physicians, April 14, 2010: http://www.skincarephysicians.com/ acnenet/acne.html [accessed July 2011]. Brian Rohrig teaches chemistry at Jonathan Alder High School in Plain City (near Columbus), Ohio. His most recent ChemMatters article, “Myths: Chemistry Tells the Truth,” appeared in the December 2010 issue. .COM PHOTOS How Do They Work? By Christen Brownlee Better than sugar? First, let’s look at table sugar. It belongs to a family of molecules called carbohydrates that are found in fruits, vegetables, dairy products, breads, and sweets. Carbohydrates are made of many repeating units that are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Table sugar, or sucrose, is made of two units. These two units, called glucose and fructose, are combined to produce sucrose, as follows: CH2OH H HO O H OH H H OH HOCH2 H H CH2OH OH Glucose HO HO HO OH H Fructose CH2OH H H O O H OH H H OH HOCH2 H H H O HO O CH2OH OH Sucrose H + H2O Carbohydrates are an excellent fuel for the body because they are packed full of energy. They are broken apart first in your mouth and then in your small intestine. The resulting molecules enter the bloodstream and travel to cells, where they are used to release energy. But sucrose can have two negative health effects. First, when we eat food or drink beverages that contain sucrose, bacteria that live in our mouths also use sucrose as an energy source and produce acid that contribute to tooth decay. Second, when we eat or drink too much sucrose, the amount of insulin in our blood spikes. Insulin is a hormone that regulates the amount of sugar in our blood. Over time, too much insulin in the blood can lead to diabetes, a medical condition characterized by unusually high blood sugar levels. Chemists have been trying to find alternatives to sugar since 1878—that’s the year that an American chemist named Constantin Fahlberg discovered saccharin, the first artificial sweetener currently known by the brand names Sweet’N Low and SugarTwin. Saccharin is actually sodium 3-oxobenzisosulfonazole (C6H4SO2CONNa) (Fig. 1), a molecule that has little in common with sucrose but is much sweeter than sucrose. Also, the digestive system does not break it apart to derive energy the same way it does with sugar. Instead, saccharin dissolves into the bloodstream and is flushed out of the body in urine. Saccharin is now used to sweeten countless products, including drinks, candies, biscuits, and medicines. O N Na — S + Figure 1. Chemical structure of saccharin, an artificial sweetener O O Mike ciesielski A ccording to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Americans consume an average of 156 pounds of sugar each year. That’s a little more than 31 of the five-pound bags you might see in the baking goods aisle in the grocery store! We all know that eating too much sugar can cause tooth decay, weight gain, and type-2 diabetes, but is there a way to indulge your sweet tooth and still avoid sugar? Yes. Food and beverages labeled “diet” taste sweet yet don’t contain sugar—thanks to artificial sweeteners. Why do artificial sweeteners have no calories? Could they be bad for your health? Let’s compare the chemistry of sugar and artificial sweeteners to find out. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 15 Sweet aminos CH2OH CH2CI O O Cl HO OH O CH2Cl OH OH Figure 4. The chemical structure of sucralose is similar to the structure of sucrose. ... studies could not find evidence that saccharin causes cancer in humans. It is now used in food and drinks all over the world. but like saccharin, sucralose has no calories. It is washed out of the body without being digested. Sucralose is 600 times as sweet as sucrose, about three times as sweet as aspartame, and twice as sweet as saccharin. Table 1 summarizes the relative sweetness of common artificial sweeteners compared to sucrose. Sweet Substance Brand Name Relative Sweetness Sucrose none 1 Mike ciesielski Not all artificial sweeteners look like saccharin. Aspartame, known by the brand names NutraSweet and Equal, is the primary sweetener in most diet sodas. It is a combination of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins— organic compounds found in meat, eggs, milk, and legumes. A protein is a molecule made of a chain of repeating units of amino acids. The structures of two amino acids, aspartic acid and phenylalanine, are shown in Fig. 2. Aspartame (Fig. 3) consists of a combination of these two amino acids. While saccharin tastes sweet, it also has a lingering bitter and metallic taste that some people can detect. That makes it a good choice for sweetening tea and coffee, which have their own bitter taste, but not necessarily a good one for candies and soft drinks, which are known to be sweet. Aspartame does not have a bitter taste, which makes it a better choice for a wide variety of sweet foods and drinks. Unlike other artificial sweeteners, aspartame is metabolized in the body, so aspartame is higher in calories. But aspartame is 180 times sweeter than sugar, so it can be used in small quantities and, as a result, does not generate as many calories as sucrose. Another popular artificial sweetener is sucralose (brand name: Splenda). Its chemical structure is similar to that of sucrose (Fig. 4), anthony fernandez of people with brain tumors Glucose none 0.7 increased over Fructose none 1.3–1.8 the years after Saccharin Sweet’N Low, SugarTwin 300 aspartame was Aspartame NutraSweet, Equal 200 introduced on Sucralose Splenda 600 the market. Further studTable 1. Relative sweetness of artificial sweeteners compared to sucrose ies, however, revealed that brain cancer started to rise 8 Any risks to human years before aspartame was made publicly health? available. No other studies have since shown a correlation between aspartame use and Over the years, concerns have been raised cancer. that several artificial sweeteners may cause Many other artificial sweeteners have been health problems. In theory, artitested. None of these tests has provided clear ficial sweeteners should be safe O OH evidence of an association with cancer in because they pass easily through C humans. So, avoiding too much sugar or artithe digestive system without being CH2 CH2 ficial sweeteners might be beneficial to health processed. But scientific tests OH OH H H and be just what the doctor ordered! were needed to confirm that artifiN N C C C C H H cial sweeteners were indeed safe. O O H H In 1977, rats that were fed saccharin developed bladder cancer. Figure 2. Examples of two amino acids: (a) aspartic acid Selected references and (b) phenylalanine. Like all other amino acids, aspartic The rats, however, had to eat an Artificial Sweeteners: Understanding These and acid and phenylalanine consist of three parts that bind to a amount of saccharin comparable Other Sugar Substitutes, Mayo Clinic: Nutrition central carbon: an amino group (–NH2), a carboxyl group (– and Healthy Eating, Oct 9, 2010: http://www. to a human drinking hundreds of COOH), and a side chain (middle) that varies depending on mayoclinic.com/health/artificial-sweeteners/ the amino acid. cans of soda each day. As a result, MY00073 [accessed July 2011]. Congress required that all food containing Suddath, C. Are Artificial Sweeteners Really That saccharin display the following label: “Use of Bad for You? Time, Oct. 20, 2009: http://www. Phenylalanine residue time.com/time/health/article/0,8599, this product may be hazardous to your health. 1931116,00.html [accessed July 2011]. This product contains saccharin, which has Aspartic acid residue Gilman, V. What’s That Stuff: Artificial Sweeteners, been determined to cause cancer in laboraChemical & Engineering News, June 21, 2004, O 82 (25), p 43: http://pubs.acs.org/cen/whatstuff/ tory animals.” Subsequent studies could not Methanol stuff/8225sweeteners.html [accessed July 2011]. HO OCH3 find evidence that saccharin causes cancer in residue N humans. It is now used in food and drinks all H O NH2 O over the world. Christen Brownlee is a science writer in Baltimore, In 1996, studies suggested that aspartame Figure 3. Chemical structure of aspartame, an Md. Her latest ChemMatters article, “Sweet but may cause brain tumors because the number artificial sweetener Good for You?” appeared in the April 2011 issue. 16 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 www.acs.org/chemmatters ric, 15, recently developed a high fever and a bad cough. His mother took him to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with pneumonia, which is an inflammation of the lungs. In Eric’s case, the pneumonia was the result of a bacterial infection. He was sent home with a prescription of an antibiotic called amoxicillin. Antibiotics are drugs that kill bacteria or prevent them from growing in the body. Three days later, Eric’s fever went away, but he was still coughing and had difficulty breathing. Another visit to the doctor showed that he was actually infected with a strain of bacteria that was resistant to amoxicillin. This time, the doctor prescribed a more powerful antibiotic, called Augmentin, and asked Eric to take it for a week. Luckily, by the end of the week, Eric recovered. The second antibiotic was powerful enough to stop the infection. But for many Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Public Health Image Library By Margaret Orford The bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae, a common cause of pneumonia, imaged by an electron microscope people who are infected with antibiotic-resistant bacteria, finding the right antibiotic is not easy. Antibiotics are proving less effective in curing diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, and “staph” infections that occur in hospitals and health care facilities. How do bacteria become resistant to antibiotics, and how can we develop better drugs? Let’s look at what happened to the bacteria that infected Eric and how the two antibiotics worked in his lungs. istock Powerful antibiotics Pneumonia is mostly caused by bacteria, viruses, or parasites. Eric was infected by bacteria, which he inhaled from the air, and the bacteria then entered his lungs. The bacterial infection triggered an immune response that caused tiny air sacs in the lungs called alveoli to fill with fluid, which caused difficulties in breathing and coughing. If Eric hadn’t taken his medication, the fluid buildup could have impaired breathing enough to cause death. The use of antibiotics, which started in the early 1940s, has saved millions of lives from infectious diseases. Penicillin is the most prescribed type of antibiotic. It has often been described as a miracle drug because it cured not only minor wounds that became infected but also diseases such as strep throat, some sexually transmitted diseases, and an eye inflammation contracted by babies at birth. Penicillin is now used to cure a large number of bacterial diseases. Penicillin is not as successful now because, over the years, many strains of bacteria have become resistant to antibiotics. These bacteria, sometimes called “superbugs,” now contribute to the reemergence of diseases that were well controlled in the second part of the 20th century. There are different types of penicillin medications, but they all do the same thing: They stop bacteria from multiplying by preventing them from forming the cell walls that surround daughter cells. When a bacterium divides, it forms two daughter cells, each surrounded with a cell wall. But penicillin prevents the bacterium from making these cell walls, so the daughter cells do not form, and the bacterium cannot spread. The bacterium that most commonly causes pneumonia, Streptococcus pneumoniae, is actually surrounded by two types of layers: a flexible cell membrane and a tough, rigid cell wall. Penicillin interferes with a molecule that helps build the bacterial cell wall. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 17 Three characters The two antibiotics that Eric took are actually penicillin-based medications, which were intended to prevent the bacteria in his lungs from forming new cell walls. The first drug he took worked with limited success; the second drug was successful. To better understand how these drugs worked in Eric’s lungs, let’s consider the three “characters” in this story: penicillin, along with the two molecules involved in building the bacterial cell wall, called peptidoglycan and transpeptidase. Let’s start with the first character, penicillin. It is a relatively small molecule that contains a square ring in the middle in which carbon atoms form 90-degree angles (Fig. 1). Carbon atoms usually form 109-degree angles when forming single bonds, as in a molecule of cyclohexane (Fig. 2a) and 120-degree angles when forming a double bond with oxygen, as in a molecule of carboxylic acid (Fig. 2b). The square ring creates a strain on the carbon atoms that makes penicillin highly reactive because it wants to relieve that strain. There are different types of penicillin (Fig. 3), depending on the chemical nature of the R group (top left of the molecule shown in Fig. 1). H N R O H S CH3 N CH3 O COOH Figure 1. Chemical structure of penicillin. The four-sided beta lactam ring is circled in orange. FIGURES BY anthony fernandez Peptidoglycan, the second character, is a bigger molecule (Fig. 4). It is the building block of the cell wall of Streptococcus bacteria. To make the bacterial cell wall, peptidoglycan molecules are stitched together by their dangling peptide chains, as shown in Fig. 5. The third character, transpeptidase, is an enzyme—a type of protein that speeds up chemical reactions without undergoing changes itself. Transpeptidase helps peptidoglycan units bind with one another. Stopping bacterial infection The role of penicillin is to prevent the peptidoglycan molecules from getting together, so the bacterial cell wall cannot be built. 18 Chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 (a) H H H C H H C H C H (b) H C H C C H O H R C OH H Figure 2. (a) Single-bonded carbon atoms in a cyclohexane molecule form 109-degree angles; (b) carbon atoms that are double-bonded to oxygen in a carboxylic acid form 120-degree angles. First, let’s look at how two peptidoglycan molecules come together. They do so by binding to transpeptidase. The two molecules attach to a part of transpeptidase called its active site, and they are joined together in the active site. To understand how this works, imagine using a soldering iron to weld two pieces of metal together. You take two pieces of metal and apply them to the soldering iron, which melts their endings and fuse them together. SimilarIy, transpeptidase acts like a soldering iron that “fuses” the two transpeptidase molecules at their endings. Penicillin prevents this from happening by binding to the transpeptidase’s active site. As mentioned earlier, the penicillin molecule (Fig. 2) contains a square ring in which carbon atoms form 90-degree angles instead of the more natural 109-degree angles. As soon as the penicillin molecule reacts with transpeptidase, the square ring is broken. This relieves the ring strain and locks penicillin in the active site of transpeptidase (Fig. 6). The end result is that transpeptidase is blocked and cannot do its job anymore. When penicillin molecules block transpeptidase molecules, the building blocks of the cell wall are disconnected. The bacteria can no longer form cell walls for daughter cells, so they cannot infect the lungs anymore. This is what happened to Eric as he was taking amoxicillin, the first penicillin drug. But bacteria in his lungs were still able to spread. How come? beta-lactam ring. In this form, penicillin is no longer able to bond to transpeptidase. It took another penicillin-based medication—Augmentin—to fight Eric’s infection. Augmentin contains a mixture of amoxicillin and another substance called clavulanic acid that looks like a penicillin molecule (Fig. 7). Clavulanic acid binds to beta-lactamase but not to transpeptidase. This way, the betalactamase molecules are all blocked, and they can’t bind to amoxicillin. Amoxicillin was able to do its job of blocking transpeptidase and stop bacterial infection. In Eric’s case, Augmentin was all it took to stop the infection. But pneumonia can be caused by other types of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. People infected with these bacteria need to take stronger antibiotics. Also, people who are hospitalized with pneumonia are at risk for contracting a resistant strain of bacteria that causes skin infections and can kill them within three days. These bacteria, called methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), are resistant to a type of penicillin called methicillin, but they can be defeated with another type of penicillin. The reason people with pneumonia can die so quickly from an MRSA infection is that their immune RsystemHN is in aHweakened S CH condition, so they need to be diagnosed and treated faster than patients infected only with O N CH O Disease Control MRSA. Still, the Centers for 3 3 COOH NH2 www.acs.org/chemmatters S O CH3 N CH3 O HO COOH (a) H H N S O CH3 N CH3 O COOH (b) HO O H N Fighting back Although amoxicillin prevented some of the bacteria from spreading, most of them were unaffected by it. The reason is that these bacteria contained an enzyme called betalactamase that caused a reaction between water and penicillin that opened the penicillin’s H H N S (c) O H S CH3 N CH3 O COOH Figure 3. Examples of penicillin molecules: (a) amoxicillin; (b) penicillin G; and (c) ticarcillin. Note that all these molecules have the common structure shown in Fig. 1. CH3 H C=O NH CH2OH H H O O H O OH H O H H O O H H H NH CH2OH HC CH3 C O C O CH H OH O N H O COOH 3 L-Alanine HC (CH3)3COOH C O NH D-Glutamate HC C Mesodiaminopimelate tim vickers/wikipedia NH NH3 (CH3)3CHCOOH O NH Figure 6. When penicillin (white molecule in the middle) binds to the bacterial protein transpeptidase (big yellow, red, and blue molecule), it does not let go and effectively stops the bacterial infection. HC CH3 C O NH D-Alanine HC Bond broken when two peptidoglycon molecules bind with each other C D-Alanine CH3 O NH HC C CH3 O OH and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga., estimate that MRSA kills more Americans annually than AIDS. Almost every disease-causing bacterium has become resistant to antibiotics. Pneumonia, malaria, tuberculosis, the flu, and even ear infections, are harder to treat. Most of the time, these types of infections are cured by using antibiotics that are different from commonly prescribed medications. During the past few L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu decades, the number of m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP new antibiotics has been D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala declining while the number of resistant bacteria has been increasing. One L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu of the main reasons for m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala this increase in resistant m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala bacteria is that people either misuse or overuse antibiotics. L-Ala L-Ala L-Ala For example, some D-Glu D-Glu D-Glu m-DAP m-DAP m-DAP D-Ala D-Ala D-Ala people discontinue their prescription medication, so all of the bacteria that Figure 5. Chemical structure of the peptidoglycan layer. The orange and blue squares represent the polysaccharide molecule shown in Fig. 4, caused their infection may and the gray-shaded area represents the peptide molecule shown in Fig. not have been completely 4. Two successive peptidoglycan units are stitched together by linking eliminated. This happens m-diaminopimelic acid (m-DAP) of one unit with D-alanine (D-Ala) of another. when a patient starts a pre- anthony fernandez Figure 4. A peptidoglycan molecule is made of two types of molecules: a polysaccharide (horizontal molecule on top, made of two simple sugars: N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid) and a peptide molecule (arranged vertically and made of five amino acids: L-alanine, D-glutamic acid, m-diaminopimelic acid, and D-alanine (twice)). The D-alanine at the bottom is cleaved when two peptidoglycan molecules are joined together. Figure 7. Clavulanic acid has a square ring similar to that of a penicillin molecule (Fig. 1). scription of antibiotics and, after a few days, feels better. At that point, the bacteria have been exposed to the antibiotic, but while some have been defeated, others are trying to adapt. If the patient stops taking the antibiotic before the end date of the prescription, the bacteria that have not been defeated may become resistant to that antibiotic. Some people use antibiotics for conditions or diseases that are not caused by bacteria, such as the common cold, which is caused by a virus. Bacteria present in small amounts in the body might be exposed to this antibiotic and may develop resistance to it, even though they would not cause an infection because of their small number. Antibiotics can mean the difference between life and death when a person contracts a bacterial infection. Thanks to antibiotics, millions of lives have been saved for the past 60 years, but this success story may end soon. Unless new antibiotics are discovered in the near future, infectious diseases will claim many lives, becoming untreatable again, as in the days before we had access to antibiotic treatment. Selected references Dance, A. New Ways to Fight Bacteria. The Los Angeles Times, Sept 27, 2010: http://www. latimes.com/health/la-he-in-the-works-antibi. tics-20100927,0,4618631.story [accessed July 2011]. How Do Antibiotics Work? HowStuffWorks.com: http://health.howstuffworks.com/medicine/ medication/question88.htm [accessed July 2011]. Wassenaar, T. M. Antibiotics. The Virtual Museum of Bacteria, Jan 24, 2009: http://www.bacteriamuseum.org/cms/How-WeFight-Bacteria/antibiotics.html [accessed July 2011]. Margaret Orford is a high school mathematics and science teacher and a science writer who lives in Nepean, Ontario, Canada. This is her first article in ChemMatters. chemmatters, OCTOBER 2011 19 1155 Sixteenth Street, NW Washington, DC 20036-4800 www.acs.org/chemmatters American Chemical Society ® Celebrate National Chemistry Week October 16-22, 2011 Theme: “Chemistry — Our Health, Our Future!” Explore chemistry as it relates to nutrition, hygiene, and medicine. When it comes to the topic of health, the science of chemistry can be emphasized in many ways. From the vitamins and minerals we take, to the foods we chose to eat, and to the medicines that help keep us well, many chemicals serve to improve our lives. Celebrate these aspects of chemistry that keep us healthy now and in the future! Visit www.acs.org/ncw for l l l l l l l Access to Celebrating Chemistry, our hands-on activity newspaper Resources for coordinating an NCW event Information on K–12 contests Free educational resources NCW events hosted in your community Ideas for industry participation NCW promotional products For additional information about participating in NCW activities, email [email protected] or call 800-227-5558. American Chemical Society