Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

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Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving
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Transcript of Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Page 1: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Intersection 1211.21.06

Gatorade

Acid/Base Problem Solving

Page 2: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Gatorade

Page 3: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Gatorade®

• Origin /

Pictures courtesy of: http://www.gatorzone.com/stevespurrier/ and http://www.gssiweb.com/pdf/perfseries.pdf

Quote courtesy of: http://chemcases.com/gatorade/gatorade03.htm

“It was the summer of 1965. On the practice fields of Gainesville, Florida University coach Ray Graves watched his athletes walk slowly through their drills. To the side, his quarterback, Steve Spurrier - a young man with enormous talent that Graves rightly expected would one day win the Heisman Trophy - stood alone and tossed ball after ball through a tire suspended 30 yards away.”  

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Page 4: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

"Are they drinking water?" the team doctor asked.

"Well, we have water for them. Yeah, they drink a little bit of it." The coach said.

"What else do you do?" the doctor asked.

"We make them take salt tablets because they sweat so much salt.“

"Do you give them juice? Orange juice?" the doctor said."They guzzle the juice when we give it to them. Then they throw up. Same thing with soft drinks. They get cramps and get sick.“

"We think we can help, coach. We think we can make you a drink the team will like and that will let them tolerate the heat," said the team doctor. His name was Dana Shires. He was then a young physician working as a research fellow in the laboratory of Dr. Robert Cade.

Text courtesy of: http://chemcases.com/gatorade/gatorade03.htm

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Page 5: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Body Functions

• We expel carbon dioxide produced in oxidation through respiration.

• We eliminate urea through urination. • We lose water by urination, by perspiration, and as a

component of expelled gases through respiration. • The sweat passing through the membrane of the skin

contains salts from the body and deposits them on the surface of the skin.

• Heat buildup is controlled by evaporation of water from the surface of the skin and by the expiration of water vapor through breathing.

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Page 6: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Humidity Hurts

• Why would humidity affect performance?

• How much energy does it take to evaporate a pound of water that is body temperature (98.6oF)?

– Cwater = 75.3 J/(moloC) – oC = (5/9)(oF – 32)– ΔHvap water = 40.79 kJ/mol– 1 lb = 453.6 g

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Page 7: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Consequences of Dehydration

• Prof. Coyle of the University of Texas writes, "Even a slight amount of dehydration causes physiological consequences. For example, every liter (2.2 lbs) of water lost will cause heart rate to be elevated by about eight beats per minute, cardiac output to decline by 1 L/min, and core temperature to rise by 0.3o C when an individual participates in prolonged exercise in the heat."

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Page 8: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Salt and Dehydration• The salt concentration of blood is about 9g/L.  The fluid that passes

through the skin as sweat contains a lower concentration of salts; five liters of fluid loss would carry away about 14 g of sodium chloride (not 45 g.)

• The kidneys would respond to the increased salt concentration by excreting a concentrated, dark-colored urine in order to decrease the salt content in the blood.

• The blood cells will shrink, the volume of blood decreases, blood pressure drops. In extreme cases, the combination of low blood pressure and low blood volume and can lead to catastrophic heat stroke.

• The common wisdom of the 1960s was that exercising athletes should take salt tablets. But they were not encouraged to drink fluids. The salt drew fluid from the body into the intestines.

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Page 9: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Fluid Uptake

• Dr. Malawer told the Florida group he had studied the rate of absorption of water through the wall of the small bowel in human volunteers. (Fluid exchange occurs through the wall of the small bowel, not the stomach. The stomach serves only as a container.)

• Dr. Malawer's tests showed the fastest rate of transfer of water through the semipermeable membrane of the bowel occurred with a solution that was isotonic -- had the same concentration of particles -- with the body. A solution of salts and glucose of the same concentration as the extracellular fluids showed the highest rate of uptake through the small bowel.

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Page 10: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Gatorade® ingredients

• Water –hydration• Citric acid (tartness)• Sucrose• Glucose, fructose• Salt• Flavoring• Brominated vegetable oil• Mono potassium phosphate

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Page 11: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

6% CarbohydrateOJ and soft drinks are 10% complex sugars

HOO

H

H

HO

H

O

OHH

CH2

H

OH

O

H2C

OHHO

H2C

OH

OH

H

H

OH

sucroseHf = -2226.1 kJ/mol

OCH2HO

HO

CH2

OH

OH

H

H HO

fructoseHf = -1240 kJ/mol

HOO

H

H

HO

H

OH

OHH

CH2

H

OH

glucose

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Page 12: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

ΔHf Glucose

• The only ΔHf missing is glucose. 5.26 g of glucose C6H12O6 are burned in a calorimeter containing 1 L of water at 20.3oC. The final temperature of the water is 29.0oC. Find the ΔHf of glucose.

• Cwater = 75.3 J/(moloC)

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Page 13: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Which of the Gatorade®

ingredients are acidic?• Water

• Citric acid

• Sucrose

• Glucose-fructose

• Salt

• Flavoring

• Brominated vegetable oil

• Mono potassium phosphate

A

C

O

CH2

C

C

OH

CH2

C

O

OH

OOH

HO

citric acid

Page 14: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Acids – weak or strong?

• Citric acid

• Mono potassium phosphate

• Write out their equilibrium expressions as appropriate.

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Page 15: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Gatorade® pH

• The pH of Gatorade is 2.95. If the citric acid were solely responsible for the pH, what would its initial concentration be?

• Ka1= 7.1 x 10-4 

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Page 16: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Gatorade® pH

• How would the addition of sodium citrate affect the pH of the solution?

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Page 17: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Gatorade® Flavoring

H

O

citral

The lemon flavoring used by Gatorade® is citral.

Brominated vegetable oil is used as a flavor emulsion.

Explain.

O-

OBr

Br

Brominated vegetable oil

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Page 18: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Original Sweetness

• Sodium cyclamate was shown to cause bladder cancer in mice

• Replaced with fructose

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Page 19: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

The when and how much:

• Drink 17-20 oz 1+ hr ahead of exercise

• 7-10 oz right before exercising

• 7-10 oz every 15 minutes

• 20 oz for every pound lost after exercising

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Page 20: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Testing out Gatorade®

• Dr. Shires brought the new beverage to the Florida freshman on their practice field, late summer 1965 .

• Can you just give the new drink to the players?– Was the product toxic? – Had it been properly tested in the laboratory on animals

before it was introduced for human consumption?   – It comes out of a well respected research group.– What if someone gets sick?– The varsity squad is set for a stellar season, but the

freshman team…– Do you need outside approval?

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Page 21: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Conducting Medical Experiments

• Did the product work? 

– The athletes reported they felt stronger.  – Was it cooler weather?– No control group.– No objective or quantitative measures. – How do you know if you succeeded or failed?

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Page 22: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Who Owns Gatorade®?

• (1.5 billion a year in sales)

• Dr. Cade offered rights to UF and USA

• Stokely-VanCamp got production rights from Dr. Cade

• Ended up in court.

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Page 23: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Polyprotic acids

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Page 24: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Tartaric Acid

Calculate the pH and concentration of the tartarate dianion in a 0.10 M solution of tartaric acid

O

C

HO

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

O

C

HO

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

+ H2O(l)

O

C

-O

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

+ H3O+(aq)

O

C

-O

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

+ H2O(l)

O

C

-O

C

CC

O

O-

OH

H

H

OH

+ H3O+(aq)

Ka1 = 9.2 x10-4

Ka2 = 4.3 x10-5

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Page 25: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Concentration of HTart-

H2Tart Htart- H3O+

I

C

E

O

C

HO

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

+ H2O(l)

O

C

-O

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

+ H3O+(aq)

Ka1 = 9.2 x10-4

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Page 26: Intersection 12 11.21.06 Gatorade Acid/Base Problem Solving.

Concentration of Tart-2

HTart- H3O+ Tart-2

I 0

C

E

Ka2 = 4.3 x10-5

O

C

-O

C

CC

O

OH

OH

H

H

OH

+ H2O(l)

O

C

-O

C

CC

O

O-

OH

H

H

OH

+ H3O+(aq)

pH =

A