Lecture: Basic Chemistry

I. Matter and Energy

A. Matter - fundamental building blocks of nature

1. elements - basic units of matter

B. Energy - capacity to do work (put matter into motion

1. potential energy - energy stored in a structure

a. water stored in a lake uphill

b. chemical bonds of glucose molecule

2. kinetic energy - energy in an object in motion

a. water in a stream - allows mill to grind corn

b. broken glucose bonds -> ATP -> muscles work

3. Forms of Energy

a. chemical energy - energy in chemical bonds

I. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) - stores energy

b. electrical energy - energy of separated charges

I. battery - + pole and - pole separate charge

ii. nervous impulse run just like a battery

c. mechanical energy - energy of matter in motion

I. bowling ball transfers energy to move pins

ii. muscle motion - ATP -> contraction of muscle

d. electromagnetic energy - energy traveling in waves (light, X-rays, UV rays)

I. electromagnetic spectrum - visible light, UV light, radio waves, X-rays

C. First Law of Thermodynamics

1. "Energy can change from one form to another, but it can never be created or destroyed" (Total Energy In = Total Energy Out)

examples: Car Engine vs. Human Body

a. Car Engine - gasoline used to run motor to move car

Chemical Energy (gas) ---> motion (20%) + heat (79%) + sound (1%)

b. Human Body - food used to move body, digest, think, etc.

Chemical Energy (food/glucose) ---> physiology (80%) + heat (20%)

II. Organization of Matter (Atoms - Elements)

A. Atomic Particles

Mass Charge Characteristics

proton 1 +1 defines element

neutron 1 neutral defines isotopes

electron 0 -1 determines element bonding properties

B. Organization of Periodic Table

1. # protons = atomic number (unique for each element)

2. # protons + # neutrons = atomic mass

3. isotope - same element; different # neutrons

# protons + # neutrons = atomic mass

Carbon-12 (99%) 6 6 12

Carbon-13 (0.9%) 6 7 13

Carbon-14 (0.1%) 6 8 14

4. # electrons - dictates the NET CHARGE of an atom

# protons # electrons NET CHARGE

H 1 1 0

H+ 1 0 +1

H- 1 2 -1

ion - any atom with a positive or negative charge

anion - atom with a NEGATIVE charge

cation - atom with a POSITIVE charge

III. Electron Shells, the Periodic Table, and Chemical Bonds

A. Electron Shells - electrons occupy "shells" as they orbit around the nucleus (2, 8, 8, ...)

B. The Periodic Table of Elements is organized by electron shells

H1 He2 SHELL 1 2 e-

Li3 Be4 B5 C6 N7 O8 F9 Ne10 SHELL 2 8 e-

Na11 Mg12 Al13 Si14 P15 S16 Cl17 Ar18 SHELL 3 8 e-


C. Chemical Bonds are formed so that each atom can have the outermost electron shell filled

1. Ionic Bond - one atom donates electron(s) to another

a. Example: Sodium Chloride (table salt) Na+Cl-

2. Covalent Bond - two atoms share one/more electrons

a. Example: Methane (CH4), Carbon Dioxide (CO2), and Ammonia (NH3)

a. Polar Molecule - electron sharing is unequal in the bonds

Example: Water (H2O)

b. Non-polar Molecule - electron sharing is almost equal

Example: Methane (C02)

IV. Elements other than C,H,O,N in Humans

Primary Elements (3% of all body weight)

Calcium Ca Bones,teeth, muscle and nerve action, blood clotting

Phosphorus P Bones and Teeth, DNA, RNA, ATP. Important in energy transfer

Trace Elements (Less than 1% of body weight altogether)

Potassium K Osmotic balance; cell voltage, muscle and nerve action

Sulfur S Component of proteins (cysteine) and other organic molecules

Sodium Na Osmotic balance; cell voltage, muscle and nerve action

Chlorine Cl Osmotic balance; cell voltage, muscle and nerve action

Magnesium Mg Co-factor for many enzymes

Iron Fe Hemoglogin and many enzymes

Copper Cu Co-factor of many enzymes

Zinc Zn Co-factor of many enzymes

Manganese Mn Co-factor of many enzymes

Cobalt Co Co-factor of many enzymes and vitamin B12

Chromium Cr Co-factor of many enzymes and potentiates Insulin

Selenium Se Required for normal liver function

Molybdenum Mo Co-factor of many enzymes

Flourine F Tooth and bones

Tin Sn Promotes growth (unknown mechanism)

Silicon Si Growth, bone mineralization, connective tissue synthesis

Vanadium V Promotes growth and reproduction

V. Chemical Reactions

A. Patterns of Chemical Reactions

1. Chemical Equation - # of atoms of each element same for reactants and products

C6H12O6 + 6O2 ------> 6H2O + 6CO2

2. Synthesis - smaller molecules form larger molecule

A + B ----> AB (anabolic process)

amino acid 1 + amino acid 2 + ...... ----> peptide (protein)

sugar 1 + sugar 2 + sugar 3 + ...... -----> polysaccharide (glycogen)

3. Decomposition - larger molecule broken down into smaller molecules

AB ----> A + B

glycogen ----> glucose + glucose + glucose + ......

4. Displacement - one part is exchanged

AB + C -----> A + BC

glucose + adenosine-P-P-P (ATP) ------> glucose-P + adenosine-P-P (ADP)

B. Exergonic vs. Endergonic Reactions

1. Exergonic - energy is released during the reaction

A + B ------> C + D + ENERGY

glucose + oxygen ----> water + carbon dioxide +ENERGY (trapped by ATP)

2. Endergonic - energy required for reaction to proceed

A + B + ENERGY ------> C

amino acid 1 + amino acid 2 + ... + ENERGY ---> peptide (protein)

C. Chemical Equilibrium

1. Reversible Reactions

A + B ------> AB and AB ------> A + B

2. Chemical Equilibrium

A + B <=====> AB

D. Rates of Chemical Reactions

1. size of reactants species (smaller means faster)

2. temperature (speeds up the particles)

3. concentration (more likely to come together)

4. catalysts (enzymes) - make reacting more convenient

VI. Acid- Base Chemistry and the pH Scale

A. Water normally exists in an equilibrium reaction with some dissociation

H2O <======> H+ + -OH

in a beaker of pure water, the ratio of H+ to H2O is about 1/10,000,000

pH = -log10[H+] = -log10[10-7] = -(-7) = 7

pH = relative concentration of H+ in a solution of water

B. Acids - compounds which increase the concentration of H+ (pH = 1 to 6)

C. Bases - compounds which decrease the concentration of H+ (pH = 8 to 14)

D. Buffer - compound that prevents large changes in pH of a solution (pH “shock absorber”)