BMS 110 Unit 1 Ch. 2

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Karteikarten am BMS 110 Unit 1 Ch. 2, erstellt von Makenna Ornes am 10/09/2021.
Makenna Ornes
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Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Frage Antworten
atoms nonliving raw building materials to make livings thing -basic units of matter -smallest properties of element
element pure substance, can't be broken down physically or chemically -contains only 1 type of atom
main 4 elements in organisms hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen
trace element & examples one that makes up less than 0.01% of body weight -can be toxic in large amounts ex: iron, arsenic, selenium, fluorine
subunits of an atom protons, neutrons, electrons
how many elements were created artificially by scientists? more than 90
protons 1 or more positive charge (+1) in nucleus of atom
neutrons 1 or more no charge (+/- 0) in nucleus of atom
electrons usually equal to # of protons if it isn't an ion negative charge (-1)
atomic # # of protons
mass # sum of protons & neutrons
isotope more or fewer neutrons than most common number (same # protons, diff # neutrons) -most elements have at least 2 isotopes -can be used in metabolic activities
radioactive isotopes isotope with unstable nucleus which spontaneously decays to new, stable atom which then is not radioactive -stabilizes itself by emitting energy
radioactive decay rates can... determine age of really old substances
we almost never see ________ in real life pure elements
radioactive emissions can reveal... activity of body cells which allows doctors to track disease's course without surgery
PET position emission tomography - uses radioisotopes to detect tumors
tracer molecule which radioisotopes are substituted for some atoms; scanner detects radioactivity (cells in cancerous tumors take up tracer faster than surrounding cells)
what determines if an atom will interact with other atoms? how many electrons it has in valence shell
what forms molecules? chemical bonds between atoms
what charges attract/repel each other? opposite charges attract each other same charges repel each other
electrons that can occupy the 1st 3 shells/orbitals 1st shell/orbital = 2 2nd shell/orbital = 8 3rd shell/orbital = 8
what is simplest atom & why? hydrogen - only has 1 electron is single shell (atomic # = 1)
energy levels in relation to shells shells closest to nucleus are lowest energy level; shells further out are at higher energy level
atoms would rather have... full shell of electrons than have no charge
chemical bond link between atoms when electrons interact; atoms become molecules -provides stability
atom is most stable when... outer shell is filled
inert atoms def & examples when an atom/element has no vacancies in outer shell -don't participate in reactions/don't react with other atoms ex: helium, neon, argon
compound 2 or more elements in proportions that never vary ex: CO2
mixture 2 or more kinds of molecules mingle in proportions that may or may not be the same ex: sucrose & water
oxidation process in which atom/molecule loses 1 or more electrons to another atom/molecule
reduction process in which an atom/molecule gains 1 or more electrons
when the electrons = the protons, the atom carries... no charge
when atom loses an electron, charge becomes +1
when atom gains an electron, charge becomes -1
ion def when an atom gains/loses an electron, balance between protons & electrons changes so it has a positive/negative charge
ionic bond def association of two ions with opposite charges
covalent bond def bond in which atoms share electrons -extremely strong & stable
nonpolar covalent bond covalent bond in which atoms share electrons EQUALLY -no charge difference at the two ends -no charge across molecules ex: molecular oxygen
polar covalent bond covalent bond in which atoms share electrons UNEQUALLY -atom with more protons pulls more & is slightly negative; other side is slightly positive -charge across molecules
usual numbers of electrons in valence shell in relation to the bond 3, 4, 5, 6 electrons = usually covalent bond 7 electrons = ionic bond 1, 2 electrons = hydrogen bond
hydrogen bond def weak link formed between a covalently bonded hydrogen & another atom in a separate covalent bond -WEAK, break easily
water's 6 characteristics 1) liquid at room temp 2) good solvent 3) polar & charged 4) high specific heat 5)high heat of vaporization 6) ice is less dense than water's liquid state
solute; what are the spheres of hydration? dissolved substances; when substance dissolves, water molecules cluster its individual molecules & form the spheres of hydration
what can dissolve in water? anything charged
free radicals any highly reactive molecule/molecule fragment having unpaired electroon
antioxidant can give up 1 electron to free radical before it damages cells -found in citrus fruits & vegetables (have phytochemicals)
what do chemical reactions do to the body fluid? remove and add substances
depending on the chemical conditions, water can... separate into 2 ions: a hydrogen ion (H+) & a hydroxide ion (OH-)
what sensors are not in the body? oxygen sensors
pH scale used to measure concentration of free hydrogen ions -pH 0 is most acidic; pH 14 is most basic; pH 7 is neutral
each unit of change away from neutrality = ... tenfold increase/decrease in concentration of H+
blood & some other bodily fluids pH range 7.3-7.5
acid releases H+ ions when dissolved in water -releases more H+ ions than OH- ions -pH below 7 ex: black coffee, lemon juice
base/alkaline fluids accepts H+ ions when dissolved in water -releases more OH- ions than H+ ions -pH above 7 ex household bleach, dissolved baking soda
weak acids (acetic acid) don't readily donate H+ but can alternate between acting as an acid or a base -can just as easily accept H+ as give it up
strong acids (HCl & sulfuric acid (H2SO4)) totally give up H+ -high concentrations can be helpful in stomach but can also be hurtful
example of acidic situation process eat food - stomach secretes HCl - separates into H+
"acid stomach" eat too much of certain foods
antacids strong bases ex: milk of magnesia releases magnesium ions & OH- which raises fluids pH acid stomach goes away
salts release ions other than H+ & OH- in solutions -form when strong acid & strong base interact
buffers substances that compensate for pH changes by donating/accepting H+
example of how buffers work base added to fluid; weak acid partner gives up H+; H+ combines with OH-; forms small amount of water; doesn't affect pH
buffers can't make... can only... can't make new H+ ions or eliminate ones present; can only bind or release them
acidosis C02 builds up in blood & too much carbonic acid forms, pH plummets
alkalosis abnormal increase in blood pH
blood pH homeostasis range 7.3-7.5 pH
Hyperventilating CO2 decreases so we breathe in bag so CO2 comes back in
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