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Chemical Bonding, Carbon style

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Title: Chemical Bonding, Carbon style


1
Chemical Bonding, Carbon style
2
Discover
  • On the index card in your box, shade in a circle
    as dark as you can with your pencil.
  • Take a piece of paper and rub across this
    shading.
  • What did you notice?

3
The Carbon Atom and Its Bonds
  • The atomic number of carbon is 6
  • There are 6 protons in the nucleus and 6
    electrons surrounding the nucleus.
  • 4 of these electrons are valance meaning they are
    ready for bonding.

4
  • Chemical bonds are the force that hold two atoms
    together.
  • A chemical bond between two atoms is made up of
    the atoms valance electrons.
  • Atoms of all elements (except noble gases) form
    chemical bonds.
  • But few elements have the ability of Carbon to
    bond with both itself and other elements in so
    many different ways.

5
  • It is possible for carbon to arrange the same
    number of atoms in different ways.
  • They can form straight chains, branched chains,
    and rings.
  • Sometimes even networks of two or more rings of
    carbon atoms are joined together.

6
Forms of Pure Carbon
  • Because of the ways carbon forms bonds, the pure
    element can exist in different ways.
  • Diamond, graphite, and fullerene are three forms
    of the element Carbon.

7
Diamond
  • The hardest mineral diamond forms deep within
    Earth.
  • At very high temperatures and pressures, carbon
    atoms for diamond crystals. Each carbon atom is
    bonded strongly to 4 other carbon atoms.
  • The result is a solid that is extremely hard and
    unreactive.
  • The melting point of diamond is over 3,500
    degrees Celsius.
  • They are formed in a crystalline pattern.

8
Graphite
  • Every time you write with pencil you leave a
    layer of carbon on the paper.
  • lead in the pencil is actually graphite,
    another form of the element carbon.
  • It does not contain any of the element lead.
  • Carbon atoms are bonded strongly together in flat
    layers. But the bonds connecting the layers are
    very weak, so the layers past by each other very
    easily.

9
Homework Questions
  1. List three different forms of pure carbon.
  2. What happens to valence electrons when a chemical
    bond forms between atoms?
  3. How can you use differences in carbon bonds to
    explain why graphite and diamonds have different
    properties?

10
Carbon Compounds
11
What do all these Have in common
12
Slide guide starts Here
13
Organic Compounds
  • Carbon Compounds are so numberous that they are
    given a special name.
  • With some exceptions, a compound that contains
    carbon is called Organic Compounds.
  • Organic means of living things.
  • Any items that is made of from once living
    organisms is an Organic Compound.
  • They can also be made artificially.

14
Hydrocarbons
  • The simplest organic compounds are the
    hydrocarbons.
  • A hydrocarbon is a compound that contains only
    the elements carbon and hydrogen.

15
Life with Carbon
16
Nutrients from Food
  • Nutrients are substances that provide the energy
    and raw materials the body needs to grow, repair
    worn parts, and function properly.
  • Most of the nutrients in food are organic
    compounds.
  • Many nutrients are large, chain like molecules
    called polymers.
  • Each link in the chain is a small molecule called
    a monomer.

17
  • The body can break apart the large molecules in
    food into smaller molecules.
  • The process of breaking polymers into monomers,
    which involves chemical changes, has the familiar
    named digestion.
  • After food is digested, the body then breaks
    apart some of the monomers, which releases
    energy.
  • The body takes other monomers and reassembles
    them into polymers that match specific body
    chemistry

18
  • The four classes of polymers found in all living
    things are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and
    nuclei acids.

19
carbohydrates
  • A carbohydrate is an energy-rich organic compound
    made of the elements carbon, hydrogen, and
    oxygen.
  • The word carbohydrate is made of two parts
  • Carbo and hydrate
  • Carbo means Carbon and hydrate means Combined
    with water
  • If you remember that water is made up of the
    elements hydrogen and oxygen, then you should be
    able to remember the three elements in
    carbohydrates.

20
Simple Carbohydrates
  • The simplest carbohydrates are sugars.
  • You may be surprised to learn that there are many
    different kinds of sugars.
  • The sugar listed in baking recipes, which you can
    buy in bags or boxes at the grocery store, is
    only one kind. Other sugars are found naturally
    in fruits, milk, and some vegtables.

21
  • One of the most important sugars in your body is
    glucose.
  • Its molecular formula is C6H12O6.
  • Glucose is sometimes called blood sugar because
    the body circulates glucose to all body parts
    through the blood.
  • The name of the white sugar that sweetens
    cookies, candies, and many soft drinks is
    sucrose. It is a more complex molecule than
    glucose and has a molecular formula of C12H22O11

22
Complex Carbohydrates
  • When you eat plants or food products made from
    plants, you are often eating complex
    carbohydrates.
  • Each molecule of a simple carbohydrate, or sugar,
    is relatively small compared to a molecule of
    complex carbohydrates.
  • A complex carbohydrate is made of a long chain of
    simple carbohydrates bonded to each other. Just
    one molecule of a complex carbohydrate may have
    hundreds of carbon atoms.

23
  • Two of the complex carbohydrates assembled from
    glucose molecules are starch and cellulose.
  • Starch and cellulose are both built from glucose
    monomers, but the monomers are arranged
    differently in each case.
  • So starch and cellulose are different compounds.
    They serve different functions in the plants that
    form them.
  • They body uses starch from foods very differently
    from the way it uses cellulose

24
Starch
  • Plants store energy in the form of the complex
    carbohydrate starch.
  • You can find starches in food products made from
    wheat grains, such as bread, cereal, and pasta.
  • Starches are also found in rice, potatoes and
    other vegetables.
  • The body digests the large starch molecules from
    these foods into individual glucose molecules.
    Then the body breaks apart the glucose and
    releases energy.

25
Cellulose
  • Plants build strong stems and roots with the
    complex carbohydrate cellulose and other
    polymers. If you imagine yourself crunching on a
    stick of celery, you will be able to imagine what
    cellulose is like.
  • Most fruits, vegetables, and nuts are high in
    cellulose. So are food products made from whole
    grains.
  • Even though the body can break down starch, the
    body cannot break down cellulose into individual
    glucose molecules.

26
  • Therefore the body cannot use cellulose as a
    source of energy. In fact, when you eat foods
    with cellulose, the molecules pass right through
    you undigested.
  • However, this undigested cellulose helps keep
    your digestive track active and healthy.
    Cellulose is sometimes called fiber.

27
Proteins
  • If the proteins in your body suddenly disappeared
    you would not have much of a body left.
  • Your muscles, hair, skin, and fingernails are all
    made of proteins. A birds feathers, a spiders
    web, a fishs scales, and the horns of a
    rhinoceros are also made of proteins.

28
Chains of Amino Acids
  • The polymers called proteins are made of organic
    compounds called amino acids.
  • That means that amino acids are the monomers in a
    protein molecule.
  • Unlike the sugars in complex carbohydrates, the
    monomers in a protein are not exactly alike.
  • In fact, there are 20 different kinds of amino
    acids.

29
Food Proteins Become Your Proteins
  • Some of the best sources of protein include meat,
    fish, eggs and milk or milk products.
  • Some plant products such as beans are good
    sources of protein as well.
  • The body uses proteins from food to build and
    repair body parts. But the body must first break
    apart the protein polymers into monomers.
    Remember that starch in digested into individual
    glucose molecules.
  • In the same way, proteins are digested into
    individual amino acids. The body reassembles
    those amino acids into thousands of protein

30
Lipids
  • The third class of organic compounds in living
    things is lipids.
  • Like carbohydrates, lipids are energy-rich
    polymers made of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen.
    Lipids include fats, oils, waxes, and
    cholesterol.
  • Gram for gram, lipids store more than twice as
    much energy as do carbohydrates. Lipids behave
    somewhat like hydrocarbons- the compounds of
    carbon and hydrogen.
  • Lipids mix poorly with water.

31
Fats and Oils
  • Fats are found in foods such as meat, butter, and
    cheese.
  • Oils in foods include those such as corn oil,
    sunflower oil, peanut oil, and olive oil.
  • Fats and oils have the same basic structure. Each
    fat or oil polymer is made of three fatty acid
    monomers and one alcohol monomer named glycerol.
    There is on main difference between fats and
    oils.
  • Fats are usually solid at room temperature where
    as oils are liquid

32
Saturated and Unsaturated
  • You may hear fats and oils described as saturated
    or unsaturated. Like saturated hydrocarbons, the
    fatty acids of saturated fats have no double
    bonds between carbon atoms. Unsaturated fatty
    acids are found in oils.
  • Monounsaturated oils have fatty acids with one
    double bond. Polyunsaturated oils have fatty
    acids with many double bonds.
  • Saturated fats end to have higher melting points
    that unsaturated.

33
Cholesterol
  • Another important lipid is cholesterol, a waxy
    substance found in all animal cells. The body
    builds cell structures from cholesterol and uses
    it to form compounds that serve as chemical
    messengers.
  • The body produces the cholesterol it needs from
    other nutrients. But foods that come from
    animals-cheese, eggs, and meat-also provide
    cholesterol. Foods from plant sources, such as
    vegetable oils, never contain cholesterol.

34
  • Vitamins organic compounds that serve as helper
    molecules in a variety of chemical reactions in
    your body.
  • Vitamin C or ascorbic acid, is important for
    keeping your skin and gums healthy. Vitamin D
    develops your bones and teeth and keep them
    strong.
  • Minerals elements needed by your body. Unlike
    other nutrients, minerals are not organic
    compounds.
  • Common minerals are sodium, calcium, iorn,
    iodine, and potassium
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