F334 answers to learn

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FlashCards sobre F334 answers to learn, criado por joannalivesey em 30-04-2014.
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FlashCards por joannalivesey, atualizado more than 1 year ago
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Criado por joannalivesey mais de 10 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso

Questão Responda
Rates of reaction were measured when the amounts of reactants used up were small compared to total quantities of reactants present. why? • rate measured will be for the initial concentrations • As reactants are used up, the rate will decrease
Why can -NH2 act as a base? • NH2 group has a lone pair of electrons • which can accept a proton
Effect of a DNA mutation on enzymes • Enzymes are proteins with a specific sequence of amino acids • mutation changes DNA base sequence which means primary structure is changed • therefore tertiary structure also changes • the active site is where the reaction with the substrate takes place • an altered active site will not have the correct shape and so substrate cannot bind
What properties do chromium and nickel give steel? • Resistance to corrosion • High strength
what is meant by zero order? • concentration of X does not alter the rate of reaction
Measuring initial rate on a time-conc graph • measure gradient by drawing tangent at time = 0 • gradient of tangent gives rate of reaction
Why does alloying increase strength of metal? • Different sized atoms • Makes lattice less regular • Layers of atoms prevented from slipping
Explain what is meant by the term complex ion • Central metal ion surrounded by ligands • ligands donate a lone pair of electrons to form dative covalent bonds
Why are complexes coloured? (long answer) • Ligands cause splitting of d sub shell into two energy levels • The d orbitals are partially filled • Electron is excited from lower energy level to higher energy level • Specific frequencies of visible light are absorbed (delta E=hv) • Complementary colour is transmitted, and is the colour that we see
Describe the structure of DNA • DNA consists of two polynucleotide chains in a double helix • each nucleotide is made up of deoxyribosem, a phosphate group and an nitrogenous base • the bases on each chain are linked by H bonding • specific bases are paired between the two chains ie A-T, C-G
why do enzymes only catalyse specific reactions? • Enzymes have active sites with a specific shape • substrate can fit into active site to form an enzyme-substrate complex • substrate molecules of a different shape do not fit
What is substrate order of reaction at high substrate concentrations? • Zero • so all the active sites are filled • Therefore the rate depends on how fast enzymes-substrate complex breaks down
what makes a carbon chiral? bonded to 4 different groups
what and why is the coordination number of edta4- ? • six • It has 6 lone pairs with which it forms six dative covalent bonds
why should we recycle steel? • Iron is a non renewable resource • Saves energy and extraction costs • saves landfill space/ mining damage to environment
how can enzymes form ionic bonds with substrates? •NH3+ and COO- groups on enzyme's active site • can attract oppositely charged groups on the substrate
how do you determine if a sample is pure? • sharp melting point • carry out TLC- only one spot
Why do molecules absorb infrared radiation at specific frequencies? energy levels are quantised
why is carboxylic acid more acidic than an alcohol? • H+ can be lost by -OH on the acid/alcohol forming an anion • acidity depends on stability of anion • equilibrium position further to right for carb acid as negative charge can delocalise more across several atoms
why do amino acids have such high melting points? • they form zwitterions which attract each other very strongly due to strong ionic bonds • high energy required to separate particles
how can high resolution mass spectrometry be used to find the molecular formula of a compound by using m/z of M+ peak? • masses are measured relative to carbon-12 (12.00000)  • compounds with the same whole number molecular mass will have different Mr values from high resolution spectra • compare Mr with database values
what is Fe2O3.xH2O called? iron (III) hydroxide
Why are carboxylic acids soluble in NaOH (aq)? COOH reacts with NaOH to form a soluble salt
effect of pH on enzymes • change of pH affects charges on polar groups in the active site • e.g. COOH becomes COO-  • prevents correct interactions between enzyme and substrate
good things about enzymes • speeds up reaction rate • reduces the number of steps in a synthesis (often one-step) so improves the atom economy • reduces the amount of energy required • easier separation methods • enzymes can be reused/recycled • work well in aqueous environments so fewer organic solvents used (so less hazardous waste) • reduces use of more toxic catalysts
what is meant by crystalline? polymer chains are highly aligned
how can you tell if something is in acid-base equilibrium? transfer of proton (a proton is donated and accepted)
what is meant by tertiary structure? the overall folding of the polypeptide to give the three dimensional shape of the protein
how can enzymes catalyse the breakdown of substrates? • Reaction takes place at enzymes specific shaped active site • interactions between substrate and active site weaken bonds in substrate • activation energy is lowered
why do enzymes have an optimum temp? • high temperatures cause H bonds to break and active site is lost • at low temperatures rate is slow since activation energy is not often reached
affect of temps lower than Tg • polymer becomes brittle • chains do not have enough energy to slide over one another • force applied to change shape of polymer will cause ‘frozen’ chains to break
how to calculate Rf? distance moved by spot ÷ distance moved by solvent front
why, after 50 years, are scientists still using Watson and Crick’s model for DNA? • It explains all the known facts about DNA • it helps predict reactions which can be tested and shown to be correct
when talking about what IMFs are present say... the strongest IMF in x is ..... NOT x has ....
why did they originally think proteins held the genetic code? • there are 20 amino acids in proteins and only 4 bases in DNA • so more combinations in proteins to carry genetic data
why don't you need to use an indicator in MnO4 titrations? only MnO4–(aq) is coloured OR a colour change takes place during the reaction
what is a zwitterion? contains a positive charge and a negative charge
what get "zwittered" when zwitterions form? NH2 and COOH
should you write orders as number or letters? numbers!!! 123432534321
what does mass spec stand for? mass SPECTROMETRY
questions about rds? start with ... rds depends upon the species given in the rate equation
what is meant by the term pharmacophore the part of the molecule that... • binds to a receptor/active site • is responsible for the pharmacological action
competitive inhibition • inhibitor bonds to active site of enzyme  • blocking active site • substrate cannot bond
sequence of events from a natural substance to medical drug • show that a compound has medicinal properties • work out structure and identify pharmacophore • synthesise similar molecules • clinical trials
problems with HNO3 + NH3 -> NH4NO3 • ammonia is toxic • nitric acid is corrosive and toxic • ammonium nitrate is explosive
when talking about changes in entropy say... more negative/positive, instead of lower/higher
ways to decrease CO2 levels • increase photosynthesis (plant more trees) • capture and storage in the oceans/under the sea • capture and storage in former oil wells/porous rock

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