1 / 17

Energy and Matter

Energy and Matter. Including Unique Water Properties. Energy. All living things use energy Amount of energy in universe remains the same but can change form Defined as the ability to do work. States of Matter. Atoms and molecules are in constant motion Motion and spacing determine Liquid

rayhunter
Télécharger la présentation

Energy and Matter

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. Energy and Matter Including Unique Water Properties

  2. Energy • All living things use energy • Amount of energy in universe remains the same but can change form • Defined as the ability to do work

  3. States of Matter • Atoms and molecules are in constant motion • Motion and spacing determine • Liquid • Fixed volume and flowing shape • Solid • Fixed volume and shape • Gas • Fill volume of container and no attraction between particles

  4. Energy and Chemical Reactions(Metabolism) • Chemical Reaction • Substances change to produce different substances • Energy absorbed or released (bonds) • Reactants (left) and Products (right)

  5. Activation Energy • Amount of energy needed for a chemical reaction to begin • Catalysts “jump start” the reaction • Reduces amount of energy needed • Enzymes, proteins or RNA molecules

  6. Oxidation Reduction Reactions

  7. Water and Solutions • In comparison to a jellyfish, our bodies are both made up of cells composed mostly of water. • Chemical reactions occurs in aqueous solutions

  8. Polarity • Water molecule • Hydrogen shares electrons with oxygen • Hydrogen bonds are formed at an angle • Negative charge on oxygen and positive charges on Hydrogen create a polar compound

  9. Solubility of Water • Polar can dissolve other polar substances • Dissolved substances are found in all living things • Essential to maintain normal body functions • Muscle contractions • Nerve impulses

  10. Hydrogen Bonding • Hydrogen bonds allow water molecules to “cling” to each other & other substances • Provide the unique properties of water • Adhesion • Cohesion • Absorption and retention of heat • Cooling properties through evaporation • Density of ice • Ability to dissolve other substances

  11. Cohesion • Water molecules stick to each other • Surface tension

  12. Adhesion • Attraction to different substances • Glass molecules and water • Capillary action

  13. Temperature Moderation • Absorb or release large amounts of energy with just a slight change in its own temperature • Specific heat • Hydrogen bonds • Water can absorb large amount of energy from sun during the day and slowly release it at night • Oceans stabilize Earth’s temperature • Organism’s can keep cells at even temperature despite changes in the environment

  14. Evaporative cooling • Liquid evaporates taking heat with it • Remaining liquid is cool • Prevents overheating of land organisms

  15. Density of Ice • Solid water is less dense than liquid • Shape of water molecule & hydrogen bonding • Angle between hydrogen atoms so wide that open spaces are formed as it becomes solid • Ice floats • Ponds and lakes freeze top down • Important for aquatic organisms

  16. Acids and Bases • Ionization of water • Water molecules move • Collisions occur & some strong enough to knock off a Hydrogen atom • The loose Hydrogen then joins another water molecule • H2O <-> H+ + OH- (Hydroxide ion) • H+ +H2O <-> H3O + (Hydronium ion) • If hydronium ions are greater solution is acidic

  17. Acidic • H3O + (Hydronium ion) • Sour taste and highly corrosive • Basic or Alkaline • OH- (Hydroxide ion) • Bitter taste and slippery • pH scale (0 acidic, 7 neutral, 14 basic) • Buffers • Chemical substances used to neutralize small amounts of either an acid or base

More Related