how is water formed and what does that thing provide water.
forms through hydrogen bonding when a slightly positive hydrogen attracts to a slightly negative atom like oxygen nearby
hydrogen bonds allow for structural support and its a weak force compared to covalent and ionic bonds
what are the unique properties of water.
high heat of vaporization- cooling system for animals, universal solvent-breaks down large toxic molecules like ammonia, hydrogen bonds provide liveable life conditions, water can also stick to itself (cohesion) and other substances (adhesion). This gives water its surface tension and the reason it's liquid. As water freezes hydrogen bonds stabilize and it becomes less dense
what are organic molecules, biomolecules and how are all biomolecules related?
organic molecules are molecules that contain hydrogen and carbon. Biomolecules are organic molecules used for life functions and they are related because of the carbon properties they all have.
different types of carbon bonds?
Single carbon bonds-stable and the bond will determine shape and function
double carbon bonds- less flexible and the double bond gives it a different shape and function
what is a functional group and the 5 types we know?
a carbon chain that has other atoms attached to it giving it unique properties. a functional group has the same properties regardless of the carbon chain
organic molecule that has the same formula but different stucture or arrangement. This means they are usually in different functional groups so different properties.
what are macromolecules, monomers, and polymers
macromolecules are many sub units joined together or polymers
monomers are the sub units
what is dehydration synthesis and hydrolysis
dehydration synthesis is a reaction that builds polymers. hydroxyl of one monomer and hydrogen of a monomer create water while the monomers bond. Water is by product
hydrolysis- a reaction used to break apart polymers
water inserts itself between the bonds of the polymer and the oh binds to one sub unit while the h bonds to another sub unit
ribose and deoxyribose are used for dna
True
what are the main purposes of carbs and what are some examples
a source of energy for all living organisms and structural functions for plants too
storage--- glycogen in animals and starch in plants
structure--- cellulose in plants and veggies, chitin in some animals and fungi and peptidoglycan in bacteria
what are the 3 carbs
monosaccharides- one sub unit of a larger sugar molecule or a single sugar molecule.
(carbs can have 3-7 carbons glucose most common hexose)
disaccharide- a dimer of a monosaccharide 2 monos bonded through dehydration synthesis
polysaccharide-polymer of monosaccharides
common knowledge of lipids?
insoluble in water because of hydrocarbon bonds that are non-polar, many functions like components of cell membrane, hormones and energy storage
what are triglycorides, what are the components
triglycerides are mainly used in energy storage. animals-fats, plants-oil. Composed of a glycerol back bone, and 3 fatty acids
the glycerol backbone is composed of 3 carbons and 3 hydroxyl groups, its polar, and becomes non-polar when 3 fatty acids are bonded to it through dehydration synthesis.
fatty acids are a long chain of hydrocarbons with a carboxyl group at the end. its slightly acidic and the carboxyl undergoes dehydration synthesis with hydroxyl
difference between unsaturated and saturated fats.
saturated- no double carbon bonds and lots of hydrogens so its stronger and a solid. its hard to break down
unsaturated- has one or more double bonds so less hydrogens. its weaker and liquid. plus easier to break down. Can become trans fats
water are the 3 other lipids
waxes-contain a fatty acid, alcohol functional group, and a carbon chain, Hydrophobic
phosphates-have two fatty acids and a phosphate group instead of a third fatty acid the tail is fat and non-polar (hydrophobic). While the head is a phosphate and polar (hydrophillic
steroids/sterols- Are composed of 4 carbon chains joined together with a functional group attached. cholesterol is used to build most hormones.
what are the monomers and polymers of proteins and what makes them up
monomers- amino acids, over 20 different ones because they have different r groups. proteins range from 8-1000 amino acids
polymers- polypeptides, a peptide is bond between amino acids
how are amino acids joined and broken
dehydration synthesis to join amino acids through covalent bonds
hydrolisis to break polypeptides into individual amino acids
4 structures of protein and what are they
primary structure- simple linear chain of amino acids
secondary- when proteins are folded or coiled depends on location of hydrogen bonds. Fold- beta-pleated sheet, coil- alpha Felix
tertiary structure-occurs when there is a irregular bond in R-group/backbone. Results in ball like proteins.
Quaternary structure- happens when two polypeptides are joined together making a larger macromolecule
the monomer nucleic acids are a monosaccharides
False
its a nucleotide while carbs have monosaccharides
what is denature and coagulation
denature is when the protein shape is changed but its reversible
coagulation is when the protein structure is irreversible
how can you identify simple and advanced carbs
simple uses Benedict reagent. the mono and disacharddies reduce the iron in the reagent as temp increases causing colour change (blue to orangey red)
advanced uses iodine. amylose of polypeptides bonds to the iodine changing colour (brown to black)
how can you identify proteins and lipids
proteins- beuret solution it reacts with peptide bonds changing colour (blue to pink to purple) more bonds means more reactions means more colour change
lipids translucent test and sudan 4 which dissolves in fat changing colour pink to red.