09/098 Bio Notes
09/098 Bio Notes
09/098 Bio Notes
Weak Interactions
o Hydrogen bonds
o Van der Waals forces
Water is one of the few compounds found in a liquid state over most of Earth’s surface
A molecule in which the charges are unevenly distributed is said to be polar because the
molecule is a bit like a magnet with two poles.
o For example, water is a polar molecule because it has a partial negative charge on one
end and a partial positive charge on the other.
The attraction between a hydrogen atom with a partial positive charge and another atom with a
partial negative charge is known as a hydrogen bond.
Because water is a polar molecule, it is able to form multiple hydrogen bonds, which account for
many of water’s special properties.
Cohesion causes water molecules to be drawn together, which is why drops of water form beads
on smooth surfaces. Cohesion also produces surface tension, explaining why some insects and
spiders can walk on a pond’s surface.
Adhesion between water molecules and glass is stronger than the cohesion between the water
molecules. Thus, suspension is caused in the graduated cylinder.
The chemical reactions that occur within living things do so in a water environment.
Water is often part of a mixture, where two or more elements or compounds are physically
mixed together.
o Water’s polarity gives it the ability to dissolve ionic compounds and other polar
molecules.
o Water can separate materials into pieces so small that they cannot be dissolved, and the
movement of the water molecules keeps those small particles suspended.
Water molecules sometime split apart to form ions.
pH scale goes from 0-14
o pure solutions with a pH of below 7 are acidic because they have more H + ions that OH-
ions. The lower the pH, the greater the acidity.
o pure solutions with a pH of above 7 are basic because they have more OH - ions than H+
ions. The higher the pH, the more basic the solution.
Buffers help prevent drastic changes in pH. Buffers dissolved in life’s fluids play an important
role in maintaining homeostasis.
2.3 Carbon Compounds
Carbon can bond with many elements – including H, O, P, S, N – to form compounds with many
different chemical properties.
o Carbon-carbon bonds can be single, double, or triple covalent bonds.
Monomers join together to form polymers. (aka macromolecules)
o Four major groups are:
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Nucleic acids
Proteins
Carbohydrates
o Sugar, starch, and cellulose
o Made up of C, H, O – in a 1 : 2 : 1
o Organisms use carbohydrates to store and release energy, as well as for structural
support and protection.
Lipids
o Fats, oils, waxes
o Made up of mostly C and H
o Lipids can be used to store energy, and they form important parts of biological
membranes and waterproof coverings.
o Function as chemical messengers
o Can be saturated, unsaturated, and polysaturated
Nucleic Acids
o Made up of nucleotides (monomers)
5-carbon sugar, phosphate group, and nitrogenous base
o Capture and transfer chemical energy.
o Nucleic acids store and transmit hereditary information
Proteins
o Made up of amino acids, N, C, H, O
Amino group on one end and carboxyl group on the other
o Some proteins function to control the rate of reactions and regulate cell processes.
Others form important cellular structures, while still others transport substances into or
out of cells or help fight disease.
Chemical reactions involve changes in the chemical bonds that join atoms in compounds.
Chemical reactions that release energy often occur on their own, or spontaneously. However,
chemical reactions that absorb energy require a source of energy.
Chemical reactions that release energy don’t always occur spontaneously. Otherwise, the pages
of a book might burst into flames without warning. The activation energy is involved in chemical
reactions regardless of whether the overall chemical reaction releases energy or absorbs energy.
The role of enzymes is to speed up chemical reactions that take place in cells.
Enzymes are specific, generally catalyzing only one chemical reaction.