SPRING 2015 Chemical Principles: Water and Polarity.

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SPRING 2015 Chemical Principles: Water and Polarity

Transcript of SPRING 2015 Chemical Principles: Water and Polarity.

Page 1: SPRING 2015 Chemical Principles: Water and Polarity.

SPRING 2015

Chemical Principles:

Water and Polarity

Page 2: SPRING 2015 Chemical Principles: Water and Polarity.

Overview: A Chemical Connection to Biology(Chapter 2 and Chapter 3)

• Living organisms are subject to basic laws of physics and chemistry

• To understand living organisms you have to understand their physics and chemistry

• “Reductionist” approach

• Life is an “emergent property” of atoms and molecules

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• In a nonpolar covalent bond, the atoms share the electron equally

• In a polar covalent bond, one atom is more electronegative, and the atoms do not share the electron equally

• Unequal sharing of electrons causes a partial positive or negative charge for each atom or molecule

All covalent bonds are not the same

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Water is an excellent example of a compound with polar covalent bonds

+ +H H

O

H2O

The oxygen end is slightly negative and the hydrogen ends are slightly positive

Oxygen’s electron distribution causes the bent shape

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Methane is an example of a compound with non-polar covalent bonds

• Roughly equal sharing of electrons between C and H

• Electron distribution is even

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Weak Chemical Bonds

• Strong chemical bonds such as covalent bonds are not the only important bonds in living systems.

• Weak chemical bonds are also important

• Weak chemical bonds reinforce shapes of large molecules, help molecules attach to each other and provide on/off switches

• Living systems are smart! They don’t waste energy making things stronger than they need to be.

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Hydrogen Bonds a key type of weak bond

• A hydrogen bond forms when a hydrogen atom covalently bonded to one electronegative atom is also attracted to another electronegative atom

• The hydrogen atom is shared between two more electronegative atoms

• In living cells, the electronegative partners are usually oxygen or nitrogen atoms

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Hydrogen bonding between water and ammonia-a simple and non-biological example

+

+

+

+

+

Water (H2O)

Ammonia (NH3)

Hydrogen bond

H-bonds are

weak, short-range,temporary,directional

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Van der Waals Interactions-a less important weak bond

• If electrons are distributed asymmetrically in molecules or atoms, they can result in “hot spots” of positive or negative charge

• Van der Waals interactions are attractions between molecules that are very close together as a result of these charges

• Individually very weak but collectively strong

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The polarity of water molecules results in hydrogen bonding in water

• The H bonds make water molecules stick together

• They will also stick to other polar molecules (but not nonpolar ones)

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Five emergent properties of water result from H bonding and contribute to

water’s fitness for life

–Cohesion/adhesion/surface tension–Ability to moderate temperature•High specific heat•Evaporative cooling

–Expansion upon freezing–Properties as a solvent–Dissociation

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Cohesion, Adhesion, Surface Tension

• Collectively, hydrogen bonds hold water molecules together, a phenomenon called cohesion

• Adhesion is an attraction between different substances, for example, between water and plant cell walls

• Both help water flow inside organisms for example the transport of water against gravity in plants

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Water-conductingcells

Adhesion

Cohesion

Directionof watermovement

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• Cohesion of water molecules leads to a property called surface tension

• Surface tension is a measure of how hard it is to break the surface of a liquid

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Ability to Moderate Temperature-Important

• Water can absorb or release a large amount of heat with only a slight change in its own temperature-it has a high specific heat.

• Water absorbs heat from warmer air and releases stored heat to cooler air-it moderates temperature changes

• It protects against large changes in temperature

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Water’s High Specific Heat

• The specific heat of a substance is the amount of heat that must be absorbed or lost for 1 g of that substance to change its temperature by 1ºC

• The specific heat of water is 1 cal/g/ºC

• Water resists changing its temperature because of its high specific heat

• Note: The “calories” on food packages are actually kilocalories (kcal), where 1 kcal = 1,000 cal

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• Water’s high specific heat can be traced to hydrogen bonding

– Heat is absorbed when hydrogen bonds break

– Heat is released when hydrogen bonds form

• Added heat breaks hydrogen bonds in water without raising water’s temperature very much.

• high specific heat of water minimizes temperature fluctuations to within limits that permit life

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Water acts as a temperature moderator-global example

• The Gulf Stream is an ocean current that carries heat from the equator to the northern latitudes of Europe

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It always heats up faster than water. Why?

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Efficient evaporative cooling by water is also a consequence of hydrogen bonding

•Evaporation is transformation of a substance from liquid to gas•Heat of vaporization is the heat a liquid must absorb for 1 g to be converted to gas•As a liquid evaporates, its remaining surface cools, a process called evaporative cooling •Evaporative cooling of water helps stabilize temperatures in organisms and bodies of water

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Evaporative cooling in action

• This is the most effective way for many animals to maintain body temperature because turning water into steam gets rid of so much excess heat.

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Expansion Upon Freezing-Insulation of Bodies of Water by Floating Ice• When water solidifies, each molecule is H-

bonded to four others in a rigid array: ice

• All the bonding holds the molecules relatively motionless at a certain distance apart

• In liquid water molecules move more freely and get closer together

• Water reaches its greatest density as a liquid at 4°C not as a solid at 0°C

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H Bonds in Ice and Liquid Water

Hydrogenbond

Hydrogen bonds break and re-form

Molecules can approach more closely

Hydrogen bonds are stable

Molecules do not move easily

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Solvent properties-The Solvent of Life

• Water is a versatile solvent due to its polarity, which allows it to form hydrogen bonds easily with many solutes.

• When a polar or ionic compound is dissolved in water, each ion is surrounded by a sphere of water molecules called a hydration shell or sphere of hydration.

• Non-ionic or non-polar substances cannot form a hydration shell with water.

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• Water can dissolve compounds made of polar or ionic molecules: like dissolves like.

• Even large polar molecules such as proteins can dissolve in water if they have ionic and polar regions

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Hydrophilic and Hydrophobic Substances

• A hydrophilic substance is one that has an affinity for water (water-loving)

• A hydrophobic substance is one that does not have an affinity for water (water hating)

• Oil molecules are hydrophobic because they have relatively nonpolar bonds; carbohydrates and proteins tend to be hydrophilic because of polar covalent bonds.

IMPORTANT!!!!!

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Water dissociates or ionizes

• A hydrogen atom in a hydrogen bond between two water molecules can shift from one to the other:

– The hydrogen atom leaves its electron behind and is transferred as a proton, or hydrogen ion (H+)

– The molecule with the extra proton is now a hydronium ion (H3O+), though it is often represented as H+

– The molecule that lost the proton is now a hydroxide ion (OH–)

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• This reaction is called the dissociation of water.

• Water is in a state of dynamic equilibrium in which water molecules dissociate at the same rate at which they are being reformed

• But even pure water has some hydronium and hydroxide in it.

Hydroniumion (H3O+)

Hydroxideion (OH–)

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• Though statistically rare the dissociation of water molecules has a great effect on organisms

• Changes in concentrations of H+ and OH– can drastically affect the chemistry of a cell

• In pure water hydronium=hydroxide

• Some substances shift the balance so there is more hydronium = acids.

• Others shift the balance so there is more hydroxide = bases.

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• Biologists use something called the pH scale to describe whether a solution is acidic or basic

• Pure water has a pH of 7.0

• Acidic solutions have pH values less than 7

• Basic solutions have pH values greater than 7

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Most liologicalfluids have pH values in the range of 6 to 8

Life unctionsbest near neutral pH Neutral

solution

Acidic solution

Basic solution

OH–

OH–

OH–

OH–

OH–OH–

OH–

H+

H+

H+

OH–

H+ H+

H+ H+

OH–

OH–

OH–OH–

H+

OH–

H+

H+

H+

H+

H+

H+

H+

OH–

Neutral [H+] = [OH–]

Incr

easi

ng

ly A

cid

ic [

H+]

> [

OH

–]

Incr

easi

ng

ly B

asic

[H

+]

< [

OH

–]

pH Scale0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Battery acid

Gastric juice,lemon juice

Vinegar, beer,wine, cola

Tomato juice

Black coffee

Rainwater

Urine

SalivaPure water

Human blood, tears

Seawater

9

10

Milk of magnesia

Household ammonia

Householdbleach

Oven cleaner

11

12

13

14

Therefore living

systems must maintain their

internal pH close to pH 7

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Buffers

• Buffers are substances that minimize changes in concentrations of H+ and OH– in a solution

• Living systems have to contain buffers

• Most buffers consist of an acid-base pair that reversibly combines with H+