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What Am I Doing Here

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What Am I Doing Here? What is chemistry? Chemistry: the study of all substances and the changes they undergo. ... Spectrophotometer: measures light intensity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What Am I Doing Here


1
What Am I Doing Here?
  • What is chemistry?
  • Chemistry the study of all substances and the
    changes they undergo.
  • Touches nearly all aspects of our livescan you
    think of some examples?
  • The central science it overlaps with so many
    other sciences.

2
WHY STUDY CHEMISTRY?
  • It will help you understand the world!
  • HINT Dont try to memorize!
  • The task is easier if you concentrate on
    understanding concepts, not memorizing facts.

3
Biochemistry (my favorite)
  • Study of chemical reactions that occur in living
    organisms
  • What it studies
  • DNA to RNA to Proteins
  • CSI--Forensics
  • Springer--paternity tests (can disprove a parent
    with blood types, but you cannot prove without
    DNA
  • Genetically altered plants/animals

4
"Alba", the green fluorescent bunny, is an albino
rabbit. This means that, since she has no skin
pigment, under ordinary environmental conditions
she is completely white with pink eyes. Alba is
not green all the time. She only glows when
illuminated with the correct light. When (and
only when) illuminated with blue light (maximum
excitation at 488 nm), she glows with a bright
green light (maximum emission at 509 nm). She was
created with EGFP, an enhanced version (i.e., a
synthetic mutation) of the original wild-type
green fluorescent gene found in the jellyfish
Aequorea Victoria. EGFP gives about two orders of
magnitude greater fluorescence in mammalian cells
(including human cells) than the original
jellyfish gene.
Alba, the fluorescent bunny.
5
Organic Chemistry
  • Study of substances containing carbon
  • (closely related to biochemistry--they can
    overlap in many areas)
  • What you can do with organic chemistry
  • Discovery of new drugs
  • Reactions mechanisms how drugs work in the body
  • Drug interactions how drugs (prescription and
    illegal) interact with each other and herbal
    remedies/medications
  • Peanut allergies (protein is the cause) 100
    people a year killed by peanut allergy

6
Inorganic Chemistry
  • Study of all substances other than those
    containing carbon
  • What we will study
  • Naming (what they are called)
  • Structure (what they look like)
  • Function (how they work together--valence
    electrons)

7
Physical Chemistry
  • Study of structures of substance, how fast they
    change, and the role of heat in chemical changes
  • We study
  • Thermochemistry heat flowing in/out of a
    chemical reaction
  • Exothermic/Endothermic reactions
  • The chemistry behind heat and light
  • Real life example THE LIGHTSTICK

8
Howstuffworks.com
9
Analytical Chemistry (a lot of math here)
  • Study of what is in a substance and how much is
    there
  • Techniques used
  • Liquid/gas chromatography
  • NMR--nuclear magnetic resonance
  • Spectrophotometry

10
Chromatography used to separate/purify
substances as well as identify them
NMR machice (one type) used to find structures
of molecules as well as many other uses
Spectrophotometer measures light intensity
11
Scientific Method
  • What is the scientific method?
  • You use it every day without knowing it.
  • Example
  • Weather --if it is cloudy you predict it may rain
    and dress accordingly
  • Flashlight
  • Why do we need a scientific method?
  • It allows a standard for experimentation.
  • Gives scientist rules to follow so tests can be
    repeated

12
Steps of the scientific method
  • Observation ask a question
  • Hypothesis predict an answer (educated guess
    after researching the topic)
  • Experiment test your hypothesis designed to be
    repeatable
  • Data analysis study the results
  • Conclusion come up with an answer, either
    proving or disproving your hypothesis (it is okay
    to have an incorrect hypothesis if you always
    know the answer ahead of time there is no need to
    do the experiment)

13
Theory vs Law
  • Scientific theory a well-tested explanation for
    a broad set of observations (it may be changed
    after future tests)
  • Scientific law a concise statement that
    summarizes the results of many observations and
    experiments (not an explanation)

14
5 branches of Chemistry
  • Biochemistry Study of chemical reactions that
    occur in living organisms
  • Organic Chemistry Study of substances
    containing carbon
  • Inorganic Chemistry Study of all substances
    other than those containing carbon
  • Physical Chemistry Study of structures of
    substance, how fast they change, and the role of
    heat in chemical changes
  • Analytical Chemistry Study of what is in a
    substance and how much is there

15
Unit 1 Introduction, Scientific Method, Safety,
Matter, Energy
  • Ch. 1.1 1.3
  • 2.1 2.4.

16
Matter
  • Matter Has mass and volume.
  • Law of Conservation of Matter Matter is neither
    created nor destroyed.
  • Examples of Matter?
  • States of Matter
  • State Example Shape vs. Volume
  • Solid
  • Liquid
  • Gas
  • Plasma

17
Physical vs Chemical
  • Properties
  • Physical a quality that can be observed or
    measured without changing the substances
    composition
  • Chemical a quality that can only be observed by
    changing the composition.

18
Physical vs Chemical
  • Changes Has the change altered the identity of
    the substance.
  • Physical Does not alter the substances
    identity.
  • Chemical Mass change, forms a precipitate,
    releases heat and / or light, color changes,
    gives off gas.

19
5 Indicators of a Chemical Reaction
  • Formation of a precipitate (ppt)
  • Evolution of a gas
  • Color change
  • Release/absorption of heat or light
  • Apparent change in mass (it looks like the mass
    is smaller/larger)

20
  • Classification of Matter (with examples)
  • Homogeneous
  • Element Can not be separated into simpler
    substances by a chemical change.
  • Use symbols
  • Periodic table (properties)
  • Compound Combined by chemical reaction in a
    fixed proportion.
  • Organic
  • Inorganic
  • Solutions
  • Heterogeneous Visibly different parts.
  • Mixture

21
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
  • Physical properties can be observed using any of
    the 5 senses.
  • Separation Techniques for Mixtures
  • Filtration
  • Distillation
  • Terms to know (they will appear throughout the
    course)
  • Malleable able to be shaped or bent
  • Ductile able to be pulled into wire

22
Energy
  • Energy The capacity to do work or to produce
    heat.
  • Work the capacity to move an object over a
    distance against a resisting force.
  • Where is energy found
  • Train, sunlight, chocolate bar, etc
  • Radiant energy
  • Kinetic energy energy of motion.
  • KE 1/2mv2
  • Mechanical energy carried by moving parts of a
    machine
  • Thermal energy caused by random internal motion
    of particles of matter

23
  • Potential energy Energy possessed by objects
    because of their position.
  • Gravitational Potential Energy
  • GPE mgh mass x acceleration due to gravity x
    height
  • Electrical Potential Energy exists when objects
    with different electrical charges are separated
  • Chemical Potential Energy exists due to
    arrangement of particles that make up a substance
  • Law of Conservation of Energy In any process,
    energy is neither created nor destroyed.

24
  • Measuring Energy
  • Calorie (cal) a common unit of energy.
  • One calorie the amount of heat needed to raise
    the temp of one gram of water by one Celsius
    degree.
  • Joule The SI unit of energy.
  • 1 cal 4.184 J
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