1 / 29

Chemical Reactions

Chemical Reactions. I. CHEMICAL Reactions:. All the chemical reactions in our bodies are called metabolism . Breakdown and reassemble molecules in the body. Chemical bonds are broken and formed during chemical reactions. II. Writing a Chemical Equation:. YIELDS. REACTANTS. PRODUCTS.

alisa
Télécharger la présentation

Chemical Reactions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chemical Reactions

  2. I. CHEMICAL Reactions: • All the chemical reactions in our bodies are called metabolism. • Breakdown and reassemble molecules in the body. • Chemical bonds are broken and formed during chemical reactions.

  3. II. Writing a Chemical Equation: YIELDS REACTANTS PRODUCTS CH4 + 2O2  CO2 + 2H2O (methane) + (oxygen)  (carbon dioxide) + (water)

  4. II. Writing a Chemical Equation: • Coefficients = # of molecules of a compound • Ex: 6O2 = 6 molecules of Oxygen (O) • 3H2O = 3 molecules of H2O CH4 + 2O2  CO2 + 2H2O

  5. II. Writing a Chemical Equation: • Subscripts = # of atoms of an element • Ex: CH4 = 1 atom C, 4 atoms H • CO2 =1 atom of C,2 atoms O CH4 + 2O2 CO2 + 2H2O

  6. II. Writing a Chemical Equation: • How many atoms of O are in 6O2 ? 12 atoms of O!

  7. III. Balancing Chemical Equations: • In ALL chemical equations the same number of atoms of elements are on the reactant and the product side of chemical equations • Why? • Because of the Law of Conservation of Matter (atoms are never created or destroyed; they are simply rearranged!)

  8. III. Balancing Chemical Equations: • We balance equations so the Law of Conservation of Mater is NOT violated! • We must always balance equations using coefficients!!

  9. Tips for balancing equations: • Subscriptscan never be changed! • Coefficients must always be placed in FRONT of the entire compound! • Create an atom inventory

  10. Ex: Balance the following equations so the Law of Conservation of Matter is NOT violated: H2 + O2 H2O

  11. Ex: Balance the following equations so the Law of Conservation of Matter is NOT violated: CaO + KBr K2O + CaBr2

  12. Ex: Balance the following equations so the Law of Conservation of Matter is NOT violated: Al2S3 + BaCl2 AlCl3 + BaS

  13. Energy of Reactions

  14. IV. Energy of Reactions • The key to a chemical reaction is energy! • Most compounds in living things cannot undergo chemical reactions without energy

  15. Graph A IV. Energy of Reactions • Activation energy = the minimum amount of energy needed for reactants to form products in a chemical reaction • Look at Graph A: the peak in the graph represents the amount of energy that must be added to the system to make the reaction occur!

  16. IV. Energy of Reactions • All living things are chemical factories driven by chemical reactions! • Enzymes (catalysts) need to be present in order to reduce the activation energy and allow the reaction to proceed quickly.

  17. Graph B IV. Energy of Reactions • Look at Graph B: the enzyme lowers the activation energy and the product will be formed sooner!

  18. IV. Energy of Reactions • Catalyst = a substance that lowers the activation energy needed to start a chemical reaction. • Enzyme = special proteins that are biological catalysts that speed up the rate of a chemical reaction • Essential to life! • Specific to one reaction

  19. How do ENZYMES Work? • The reactants that bind to the enzyme are called substrates. • The specific location where a substrate binds on an enzyme is called the active site.

  20. How do ENZYMES Work? • The active site and substrate have complementary shapes (lock-and-key). • Enzymes are very specific for the substrates that will change!

  21. How do ENZYMES Work? • When the enzyme-substrate complex forms, chemical bonds are broken and new bonds form to produce the products. • Enzyme releases the product and the enzyme can be used again

  22. Factors That Affect Enzymes: • pH (how acidic or basic a substance is) • Temperature • most enzymes in human cells are most active at 98.6F • pH & temperature will denature (change the shape) of the enzyme so it will not be able to bond with the corresponding substrate!

  23. Examples Of Enzymes Working: • Helps with digestion • DNA replication • Enzymes in the venom of a venomous snake break down the membranes of a person’s red blood cells

  24. Examples Of Enzymes Working: • Hard green apples ripen because of the action of enzymes • Photosynthesis and cellular respiration provide energy for the cell with the help of enzymes

  25. pH, Acids, Bases

  26. V. pH, Acid, BASES: • pH= how acidic or basic a substance is • Acid= substance that forms H+ (hydrogen ions) in water HCl H+ + Cl- (pH LESS than 7) Water

  27. V. pH, Acid, BASES: • Base = substance that forms OH- (hydroxide ions) in water NaOH Na+ + OH- (pH MORE than 7) Water

  28. The pH scale: 0 7 14 N E U T R A L ACID BASE

More Related