Chemical Context of Life

Element VS compound 

  • Elements cant be broken down

  • Only one element 


Compounds are ionic, covalent, or polyatomic 



Ionic 

  • One metal and one non metal

  • Transfers elections 

  • Metal name plus non mental and ide at the non metal

  • Metal first then non metal


Covalent 

  • 2 non metals

  • Named by

  • Mono di tri tetra penta hexa hepta octa nona deca 

  • 2nd element uses ide 


Polyatomic 

  • Compounds with a charge 

  • Some contain oxygen 


Multivalent 

  • Uses roman numerals for charge

  • Transitioinal elements 


Essential

  • Something needed for an organism to live a healthy life and reproduce (key word is NEEDED)


Humans need 25 elements to live

Plants need only 17


Elements make up 96% of living matter, 

  • Oxygen

  • Carbon

  • Hydrogen

  • Nitrogen


The remaining 4% is made of 

  • Calcium 

  • Phosphorus

  • Potassium 

  • Sulfur


IMPORTANT

  • Potassium allows the nerves to respond to stimulation and muscles to contract   (tighten) including those muscles in the heart


Trace Elements

  • Needed only in small quantities by only certain species

  • Like iron or iodine 


WATER AND LIFE


POLAR - Water loving, Hydrophilic

NON-POLAR -  Water hating, water fearing, hydrophobic 


Polar covalent bonds 

  • When elections are unequally shared between atoms


Non-polar covalent bonds 

  • When elections are more equally shared between atoms 


Hydrogen Bonds

  • Helps water stick together, hold

  • 4 hydrogen bonds can stick to one water molecule 

  • Diagram in notes

  • H has a small charge of + 

  • O has a small charge of - 

  • They bond to eachother 


Cohesion 

  • Molecules of pure substances are attracted to themselves 

  • Key point: like substances stick together 

  • How attraxticed the molecules are is how cohesive they are, like water is very cohesive because of their hydrogen bonding, and it sticks together


Adhesion 

  • Think adhesive like glue sticking 2 different substances

  • Molecules of 2 different substances are attracted to each other,  NOT LIKE SUBSTANCES

  • 2 different molecules 


ELECTRONEGATIVITY 

  • How attractive an element is (attracting electrons) 

  • “Electronegativity is a measure of an atom's ability to attract shared electrons to itself”

  • Also, the more electronegative an element is, it might be closer to H and O, the elements of water

  • It means its more or less polar

  • Noble gasses are not electronegative because they are very stable

  • Noble gasses only interact and react with elements under very specific conditions


DIPOLE MOMENT
- an unequal sharing of electrons caused by imbalance of electron-negativity 

  • Hydrogen bonding makes water more cohesive, making it harder to boil 


  • Sweating is an example of when your body is regulating itself, its temperature,  MAINTAINING HOMEOSTASIS ( A BALANCE IN AN EQUILIBRIUM), maintaining balance in an ecosystem 


SURFACE TENSION

  • More hydrogen bonds tend to form at the surface of water, creating something almost like a border

  • Really light things such as flies can float on the surface of water 


Capillary action

  • When water moves up against gravity

  • Happens when; Adhesion>Cohesion 

  • For example: Xylem only allows movement one way, while Phloem allows movement both ways


Solute, solvent, solution

  • Solute + Solvent = Solution

  • Solute - the substance being mixed in

  • Solvent - the liquid that it is being dissolved in

  • Solution - the solute and solvent all mixed together 


Acids

  • Binary (H + Non-metal)

  • Oxyacid (H + Polyatomic compound) - Ate turns to ic, Ite turns into us

  • H2O=H2+O  both have charges


DEHYDRATION SYNTHESIS

  • When water is produced

  • Example

  • Glucose + Galactose = Lactose 

  • C6H12O6 + C6H12O6 = C12H22O11 + H2O 

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