Lecture Outline
How Much Are You Worth?
- The human body, as all of nature, is made of chemical elements.
- The value of the elements for a typical human is $118.63.
- Other parts of nature may have more or less value depending on the elements present, say gold!
- Some elements in the body are in continuous exchange with the environment.
2.1 Regarding the Atoms
- Structure of Atoms
- An atom is the smallest unit of matter that retains the properties of a particular element.
- Atoms are composed of three primary subatomic particles:
- Protons (p+) are part of the atomic nucleus and have a positive charge.
- Neutrons are also a part of the nucleus; they are neutral.
- Electrons (e-) have a negative charge. Their quantity is equal to that of the protons. They move around the nucleus.
- Atomic number equals the number of protons in the nucleus.
- The mass number of an atom is equal to the number of protons plus the number of neutrons.
- Isotopes--Variant Forms of Atoms
- Atoms with the same number of protons (for example, carbon with six) but a different number of neutrons (carbon can have six, seven, or eight) are called isotopes (12C, 13C, 14C).
- Some radioisotopes are unstable and tend to decay into more stable atoms.
- They can be used to date rocks and fossils.
- Some can be used as tracers to follow the path of an atom in a series of reactions or to diagnose disease.
2.2 Focus on Science: Using Radioisotopes to Track Chemicals and Save Lives.
2.3 What Happens When Atom Bonds to Atom?
- Electrons and Energy Levels
- Electrons are attracted to protons but are repelled by other electrons.
- Orbitals, each of which contains one or two electrons, permit electrons to stay as close to the nucleus and as far from each other as possible.
- Think "Shells"
- Orbitals can be thought of as occupying shells around the nucleus.
- The shell closest to the nucleus has one orbital holding a maximum of two electrons.
- The next shell can have four orbitals with two electrons each for a total of eight electrons.
- Atoms with "unfilled" orbitals in their outermost shell tend to be reactive with other atoms.
- From Atoms to Molecules
- A chemical bond is a union between atoms formed when they give up, gain, or share electrons.
- A molecule is a bonded unit of two or more (same or different) atoms.
- Compounds are substances in which two or more different elements are combined in fixed proportions.
- A mixture contains two or more elements in intermingled proportions that can vary.
2.4 Important Bonds in Biological Molecules
- Ion Formation and Ionic Bonding
- When an atom loses or gains one or more electrons, it becomes positively or negatively charged--an ion.
- In an ionic bond, (+) and (-) ions are linked by mutual attraction of opposite charges, for example, NaCl.
- Covalent Bonding
- A covalent bond holds together two atoms that share one or more pairs of electrons.
- In a nonpolar covalent bond, atoms share electrons equally.
- In a polar covalent bond, because atoms share the electron unequally, there is slight difference in charge between the two poles of the bond; water is an example.
- Hydrogen Bonding
- In a hydrogen bond, an atom or a molecule interacts weakly with a hydrogen atom already taking part in a polar covalent bond.
- These bonds impart structure to liquid water and stabilize nucleic acids and other large molecules.
2.5 Properties of Water
- Polarity of the Water Molecule
- Because of the electron arrangements in the water molecule, a polarity results that allows water to form hydrogen bonds with one another and other polar substances.
- Polar substances are hydrophilic (water-loving); nonpolar ones are hydrophobic (water-dreading) and are repelled by water.
- Water's Temperature-Stabilizing Effects
- Water tends to stabilize temperature because it can absorb considerable heat before its temperature changes.
- This is an important property in evaporative and freezing processes.
- Water's Cohesion
- Hydrogen bonding of water molecules provides cohesion (capacity to resist rupturing).
- Cohesion imparts surface tension and helps pull water through plants for example.
- Water's Solvent Properties
- Water is a great solvent because ions and polar molecules (solutes) dissolve in it.
- The solvent properties of water are greatest with respect to polar molecules because "spheres of hydration" are formed around the solute molecules.
2.6 Acids, Bases, and Buffers
- The pH Scale
- pH is a measure of the H+ concentration in a solution; the greater the H+ the lower the pH scale.
- The scale extends from 0 (acidic) to 7 (neutral) to 14 (basic).
- The interior of living cells is near pH = 7.
- How Do Acids Differ From Bases?
- A substance that releases hydrogen ions (H+) in solution is an acid; for example, HCl.
- Substances that release ions such as OH- (hydroxide ions) that can combine with hydrogen ions are called bases.
- Buffers Against Shifts in pH
- A buffer system is a partnership between a weak acid and the base that forms when it dissolves in water.
- Buffer molecules combine with, or release, H+ to prevent drastic changes in pH.
- Carbonic acid is one of the body's major buffers.
- Salts
- A salt is an ionic compound formed when an acid reacts with a base; example: NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O.
- Many salts dissolve into ions that serve key functions in cells; nerve function, for example, is dependent on ions of sodium, potassium, and calcium.
Return to Top
© Copyright 2004 Thomson. All rights reserved.