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and Chemistry?

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and Chemistry? Joules or calories Joules or calories Joules or calories Joules or calories – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: and Chemistry?


1
and Chemistry?
Energy
Joules or calories
Joules or calories
Joules or calories
Joules or calories
2
Evidence of Energy
  • Motion
  • Heat
  • Light
  • Sound

3
Energy Units
  • joule - energy exerted by a force of one Newton
    acting to move an object through a distance of
    one meter (SI unit)
  • calorie - the amount of energy required to heat 1
    gram of water 1oC
  • Calorie 1000 calories
  • 1Joule 0.2390 cal

4
How much is 1 Joule of energy?
  • the energy required to lift a small apple one
    meter straight up.
  • the energy released as heat by a quiet person,
    every hundredth of a second.
  • the kinetic energy of an adult human moving a
    distance of about 6 inches every second.

5
Types of Energy
Gravitational
  • Chemical
  • Heat
  • Light
  • Sound
  • Electrical
  • Magnetic
  • Motion
  • Nuclear

Chemical
Light
E
Thermal
Acoustic
Kinetic
Nuclear
Electromagnetic
6
Energy Transformations
Gravitational
Chemical
Light
E
Thermal
Acoustic
Kinetic
Nuclear
Electromagnetic
7
Energy Transformation
8
Either or Energy
  • Energy can be sorted into one of two categories
  • either
  • kinetic (the doing the work phase)
  • or
  • potential (the getting ready to do work or the
    stored phase)

9
Energy examples
Potential Mechanical Energy and ?
Kinetic Mechanical Energy and ?
10
Potential Energy Chemical energy stored in the
bonds of molecules Stored mechanical energy
stored in an object based on its position
relative to some reference state (i.e. a wound
springs, a stretched rubber band, a boulder
perched on the edge of a cliff) Nuclear
energy stored in nucleus of an atom Gravitational
energy stored based on relative position of
two objects
11
Energy Transformation
12
Food the ultimate potential energy
  • C6H12O6 O2 ? CO2 H2O energy

ATP heat
13
Do I need energy?
Where does energy come from?
What is energy?
14
sun
  • CO2 H2O energy ? C6H12O6 O2

15
Tidal Marsh Food Web
2o Consumers
1o Consumers
Producers
Decomposers
Created by Michael J. Pidwirny, Ph.D.,
Department of Geography, Okanagan University
College
16
Energy Flow in a Food Web
Sun Energy 100
Producers
1o Consumers
2o Consumers
90
  • heat
  • life needs
  • motion

Decomposers
17
The Energy Pyramid
Producers 100
1o Consumers 10
2o Consumers 1
3o Consumers 0.1
18
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19
  • Our energy source aka food is primarily
    composed of
  • Carbohydrates
  • Fats
  • Proteins

20
  • Carbohydrates are
  • main source of energy
  • broken up into simple sugars
  • e.g. glucose and fructose
  • digested mainly in the small intestines (begins
    in mouth)
  • absorbed into the epithelial cells lining the
    small intestines

21
  • Fats
  • have the highest energy/unit mass
  • broken up into glycerol and fatty acids in the
    stomach and small intestines
  • these smaller molecules contribute to cellular
    respiration entering either glycolysis or the
    Krebs cycle

22
  • Proteins are
  • broken up into amino acids in the stomach and
    small intestines
  • amino acids are then used to
  • make new proteins
  • contribute energy via glycolysis or the Krebs
    cycle

23
Food Calories
  • calorie the amount of energy needed to raise
  • 1 gram of water by 1 oC
  • a food calorie (C) 1000 calories
  • chemists use the SI unit Joules
  • 1 Joule 0.2390 cal

24
Biomolecule Calories
Carbohydrate 4.4 calories/gm
Fat 9.0 calories/gm
Protein 4.4 calories/gm
25
Daily Requirements
26
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27
A Typical Food Label
28
Why the difference in Energy Content?
29
Chemical Energy and Reactions
  • The formation of glucose in plants is an
    endothermic reaction the resulting product has
    more energy than its reactants
  • The breakdown of glucose is exothermic - the
    products have less energy than the reactants
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