Title: Introduction to Organic and Biochemistry (CHE 124)
1Introduction to Organic and Biochemistry(CHE 124)
- Reading Assignment
- General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry An
Integrated Approach - 4rd. Ed. Ramond
- Chapter 1
- Science and Measurements
- Answers to odd numbered problems in textbook are
found in the books index.
2What is Chemistry?
- Chemistry - the study of matter and the changes
that it undergoes (e.g. reactions). - Chemistry is the central science. It unifies the
sciences in biology, physics, engineering,
medicine, pharmacy, etc.
3What is the scientific Method?
- The scientific method is a way of gathering and
interpreting information about chemistry (see
next slide). - Hypothesis
- tentative explanation (educated guess) for
observations and known facts. - Theory
- an experimentally tested explanation of an
observed behavior. (a well tested hypothesis) - Law
- statement that describe things that are
consistently and reproducibly observed. (a well
tested theory)
4Scientific Method
5What is Matter?
- Matter
- anything that has mass and occupies space.
- Weight measure of gravitational pull against
matter. - Mass measure of amount of material.
- Phases of Matter
- Solids
- Fixed volume and shape
- Liquids
- Fixed volume, indefinite shape.
- A liquids takes on the shape of the container.
- Gases
- Indefinite shape and volume.
- A gas takes on both the shape and volume of the
container.
6Properties of Substances
- Every pure substance has its own unique set of
properties that serve to distinguish it from all
other substances. - Look them up in the chemical literature
- These properties are classified as
- Intensive properties independent of amount of
substance. ( E.g. m.p., b.p., density) - Extensive properties dependent on amount of
substance. (e.g. mass, volume) - Chemical properties observed when the substance
takes part in a chemical reaction - becomes a new substance
- E.g. Heating Mercury (II) oxide to produce
oxygen. - Does the substance react with oxygen?
- Physical properties
- No chemical change is required
- Examples
- Melting point (m.p.) temp. when substance
changes from solid to liquid. - Boiling point (b.p.) temp. when substance
changes from liquid to gas. - Density
- Solubility amount of solute that dissolves in a
give amount (100g) of solvent at a specific temp. - Color
7What is Energy?
- Energy
- The ability to do work and / or to transfer heat.
- Potential energy
- stored energy
- Kinetic energy
- energy of motion
8Measurements
- Chemistry is a quantitative science. We use the
SI system of measures. - SI Units International System of Measure
- Common name the metric system
- Based on the decimal (powers of ten)
- Kg, L, K, C
- English system is used in the United States.
9Measuring Length
- SI unit of Length meter (m)
- Definition of meter - the distance light travels
in 1/299,792,458 of one second - 1 m 39.37 in.
- English units
- mile (m), yard (yd.), foot (ft.),inch (in.)
- Instruments used to measure length
- Meter stick
- Micrometer
10Measuring Volume
- SI Unit of Volume Liter (L)
- Volume is derived from SI unit of length.
- Units of volume
- cubic meter (m3) 1000 L
- cubic centimeter (cm3 or cc) milliliters (mL)
- English Units
- Gallon (gal.), quart (qt.), pint (pt.), cup (c),
teaspoon (tsp.) , table spoon (tbsp.), fluid
ounce (oz.) - Instruments used to measure volume
- Graduated cylinder, pipet or buret, digital
micropipet
11Measuring Mass
- SI Unit kilogram (kg)
- Definition of kg
- The kilogram is the unit of mass it is equal to
the mass of the international prototype of the
kilogram. - Kilogram (kg) 1000 g
- 1 gram (g) 1000 mg
- English Units
- Ton (ton.), pound (lb.), ounce (oz.)
- Instruments used to measure mass
- Balance
- Scale
12Mass vs Weight
- Mass
- Amount of matter in a sample.
- Weight
- The effect of gravity on the matter.
13SI Units
Base Quantity Name Symbol
Length Meter m
Mass Kilogram kg
Time Second s
Electric current Ampere A
Temperature Kelvin K
Amount of substance Mole mol
Luminous intensity Candela cd
Source http//physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.ht
ml
14Derived SI Units
Derived Quantity Name Symbol
Area square meter m2
Volume cubic meter m3
Speed, velocity meter per second m/s
Acceleration meter per second squared m/s2
15Derived SI Units with Special Names
Derived quantity Name Symbol Expression in terms of other SI units Expressionin terms ofSI base units
force newton N - mkgs-2
pressure, stress pascal Pa N/m2 m-1kgs-2
energy, work, quantity of heat joule J Nm m2kgs-2
power, radiant flux watt W J/s m2kgs-3
Celsius temperature degree Celsius C - K
16Metric Prefixes
Prefix Symbol Multiple Multiple
mega M 1,000,000 1 x 106
kilo k 1,000 1 x 103
hecto h 100 1 x 102
deca da 10 1 x 10
Unit ------- 1 1
deci d 0.1 1 x 10-1
centi c 0.01 1 x 10-2
milli m 0.001 1 x 10-3
micro µ 0.000001 1 x 10-6
nano n 0.000000001 1 x 10-9
17English Conversions
Length Volume
1 mile (m) 5280 feet (ft.) 1 gallon (gal) 4 quarts (qt.)
1 ft. 12 inches (in.) 1 qt. 2 pints (pt.)
1 yard (yd.) 3 ft. 1 pt. 2 cups (c.)
1 pt. 16 fluid ounces (fl. oz.)
Mass 1 c. 8 fl. oz.
1 ton 2000 pounds (lbs.) 1 in3 16.387 cm3
1 lb. 16 ounces (oz.) 2 tablespoons (T or tbsp) 1 fl. oz
18English to Metric Conversions
Length
1 in. 2.54 cm (exact)
1 m 39.37 in
1 mi 1.609 km
Volume
1 ft3 28.32 L
1 L 1.057 qt
1 gal. 3.785 L
1 tsp. 5 mL
1 tbsp 15 mL 1 mL 15 drops (gtt)
Mass
1 lb. 453.6 g 0.4536 kg
1 g 0.03527 oz.
1 kg 2.2 lbs.
19Typical Conversions Problems
- The dosage on a bottle of medicine reads Take 2
tablespoons every twelve hours. Convert this
volume to mL. - The box at the pet store states Aquarium volume
is 55 gal.. Convert this volume to liters. - The distance (length) from Clinton to Vicksburg
is appr. 32 miles. What is this distance in cm? - A marathon is defined as 42.195 km. What is this
distance in miles?
20Measuring Temperature
- Factor that determines the direction of heat flow
- SI units C or K
- Fahrenheit (F)
- Named after German instrument maker Daniel
Fahrenheit (1686 -1736) - Celsius (C) (old name centigrade)
- Named after Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius
(1701-1744) - Kelvin (K)
- Do not use () or degree in relation to K.
- Defined as 1/273.16 of the difference between the
lowest attainable temp. (0K) and the triple point
of water (0.01 C) - Instruments to measure
- Mercury thermometer
- Mercury expands and contracts as temperature
changes. Tube contains only 2 of the Hg in
thermometer. - Digital thermometer
- Water boils 212 F 100 C 373.15 K
- Water freezes 32 F 0 C 273.15 K
- Triple point is the temp. /pressure combination
at which water is capable of coexisting as a
solid, liquid and gas.
21Converting Temperature Scales
- Comparing F to C
- 0 C is 32 F
- Freezing point of water
- 100 C is 212 F
- Boiling point of water
- There are 180 Fahrenheit degrees for every 100
Celsius degrees, so each C is 1.8 times larger
than each F - Comparing C to K
- Celsius degree and Kelvin degree are the same
size.
22Scientific Notation
- A way of dealing with very large or very small
numbers. - Show examples on the board
- Avogadro number 6.022 X 1023
- 83,000
- 0.000056
- See table 1.3 p.12
23Accuracy vs Precision
- Accuracy
- How close a reported value is to the real value.
(see next slide about error). - Precision
- A measure of how close repeated measurements are
to one another.
24Uncertainties in Measurements
- How much solution is in the large graduated
cylinder? - How much solution is in the small graduated
cylinder? - Do these two measurements have the same
uncertainty?
25Uncertainties in Measurements
- Three volume measurements with their
uncertainties - Large graduated cylinder, 8 1 mL
- Small graduate cylinder, 8.0 0.1 mL
- Pipet or buret, 8.00 0.01 mL
- To denote how much uncertainty is in a
measurement, Significant figures are used. - Significant Figures
- Every measurement carries uncertainty
- All measurements must include estimates of
uncertainty with them - There is an uncertainty of at least one unit in
the last digit - Text convention
- Uncertainty of in the last digit is assumed but
not stated
26Significant Figures
- Significant figures are meaningful digits in
measurements - In 8.00 mL, there are three significant figures
- In 8.0 mL, there are two significant figures
- In 8 mL, there is one significant figure
27Ambiguity in Significant Figures
- Consider the measurement, 500 g
- If the measurement was made to the nearest 1 g,
all three digits are significant - If the measurement was made to the nearest 10 g,
only two digits are significant - Resolve by using scientific notation
- 5.00 X 102 g
- 5.0 X 102 g
- See Table 1.5 p. 17
28Rounding
- Rounding off numbers
- If the first digit to be discarded is 5 or
greater, round up - If the first digit to be discarded is 4 or
smaller, round down
29Significant Figures in Calculations
- Addition and Subtraction
- Count the number of decimal places in each number
- Round off so that the answer has the same number
of decimal places as the measurement with the
greatest uncertainty (i.e., the fewer number of
decimal places). - Multiplication and Division
- When multiplying or dividing two numbers, the
answer is rounded to the number of significant
figures in the less (or least in the case of
three or more) measurements - 2.40 X 2 5
- Exact Numbers
- Exact numbers carry an infinite number of
significant figures - Exact numbers do not change the number of
significant figures in a calculation - Example The numbers 1.8 and 32 in the conversion
between Fahrenheit and Celsius
30Dimensional Analysis / Factor Label / Converting
Units
- In many cases throughout your study of chemistry,
the units (dimensions) will guide you to the
solution of a problem - A correct answer must have the NUMBER and UNITS!
- Conversion factors are used to convert one set of
units to another - Only the units change
- Conversion factors are numerically equal to 1
- 1L 1000 cm3 Choose a conversion factor that
puts the initial units in the denominator - The initial units will cancel
- The final units will appear in the numerator
31Some Examples
- Convert 25 mL to L.
- Convert 200 pounds to grams.
- Convert 20 miles to kilometers.
- Convert 25 microliters to liters.
32Properties of Substances
- Every pure substance has its own unique set of
properties that serve to distinguish it from all
other substances. - Look them up in the chemical literature
- These properties must be intensive.
- Intensive properties independent of amount of
substance. ( E.g. m.p., b.p., density) - Extensive properties dependent on amount of
substance. (e.g. mass, volume) - Chemical properties observed when the substance
takes part in a chemical reaction - becomes a new substance
- E.g. Heating Mercury (II) oxide to produce
oxygen. - Does the substance react with oxygen?
- Physical properties
- No chemical change is required
- Examples
- Melting point (m.p.) temp. when substance
changes from solid to liquid. - Boiling point (b.p.) temp. when substance
changes from liquid to gas. - Density
- Solubility amount of solute that dissolves in a
give amount (100g) of solvent at a specific temp. - Color
33Density
- The density of a substance is its mass divided by
its volume. (the amount of mass contained in a
given volume.) - Units g / mL
- Density of
- Water is 1 g / mL
- Temperature must be stated.
- density changes with changes in temperature.
- Note table 1.8 p. 22
34Specific Gravity
- Relates density of a substance to that of water.
- Measured using refractometeres, hydrometers or
test strips. - Used to determine
- acid level in car batteries
- antifreeze level in car radiators
- alcohol content in beer and wine
- Urine to diagnose kidney problems
- Temperature must be specified since the density
of the substance and water vary, but not
necessarily at the same rate.
Specific Gravity Density of substance 0.785
g/mL 0.785 Density of water
1.00 g/mL
35Specific Heat
- Relates energy (in calories), mass (in grams),
and temperature (in degrees Celsius). - Units cal / g C
- Relates the mass, temperature, and energy.