BM: Water COPY Flashcards

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1
Q

What is a metabolic reaction?

A

A chemical reaction that happens in a living organism to sustain life.

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2
Q

What is a metabolite?

A

A substance involved in a metabolic reaction.

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3
Q

What percentage of a cell’s contents is water?

A

Around 80%

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4
Q

Describe the structure of water:

What does this mean about its polarity?

A
  • One atom of oxygen covalently joined to two hydrogen atoms - bent molecule.
  • Because shared negative electrons are pulled towards oxygen atom, the other side of each hydrogen atom is left with a slight positive charge.
  • Unshared electrons on other side of oxygen atom give it a slight positive charge.
  • This makes water a polar molecule.
    • Has a partial negative charge on one side and a partial positive charge on the other.
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5
Q

Explain hydrogen bonding:

A
  • Slighlty negatively-charged oxygen atoms attract the slightly positively-charged hydrogen atoms of other water molecules.
  • This is hydrogen bonding, and it gives water useful properties.
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6
Q

Explain 5 useful properties of water:

A
  • Important metabolite.
  • High latent heat of vaporisation.
  • High specific heat capacity, so is a temperature buffer.
  • Good solvent.
  • Strong cohesion between molecules.
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7
Q

Explain why water is a good metabolite:

A
  • Many metabolic reactions involve condensation or hydrolysis.
    • Hydrolysis requires water to break bonds, and a water molecule is released when bonds form in condensation reactions.
  • Chemical reactions take place in aqueous mediums.
  • Water is also needed for photosynthesis.
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8
Q

Why is it useful that water has a high latent heat of vaporisation?

A
  • It takes lots of energy to break the hydrogen bonds between water molecules.
    • So water has a high latent heat of vaporisation - a lot of energy is used up when it evaporates.
  • Useful for living organisms as it means they can use water loss through evaporation to cool down without losing too much water (eg sweating in humans).
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9
Q

Why is it useful that water can buffer changes in temperature?

How does it do this?

A
  • Hydrogen bonds between water molecules can absorb a lot of energy.
    • So water has a high specific heat capacity.
  • This is useful for living organisms as it means water doesn’t experience rapid temperature changes.
    • So water is a good habitat as the temperature under water is likely to be more stable than on land.
    • Also, water inside organisms remains at a fairly stable temperature - helping them to mainitan a constant internal body temperature.
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10
Q

What is specific latent heat of vaporisation?

A

The amount of energy required to change the state of 1kg of that material into a gas.

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11
Q

What is specific heat capacity?

A

A measure of the energy required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of material by 1°C.

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12
Q

Why is water a good solvent?

A
  • Important substances in metabolic reactions are ionic.
  • Water is polar, so the positive end of a water molecule will be attracted to the negative ion and the negative end of the water molecule will be attracted tot he positive ion.
  • So, the ions become totally surrounded by water molecules - they’ll dissolve.
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13
Q

Give examples of the types of substances water dissolves:

A
  • Gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide.
  • Wastes like amonia or urea.
  • Inorganic ions or small hydrophilic molecules, like amino acids, monosaccharides or ATP.
  • Enzymes, whose reactions take place within solutions.
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14
Q

Draw a positive and negative ion dissolved in water:

A
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15
Q

Why is it useful that water molecules are very cohesive?

A
  • Cohesion helps water to flow, so it is great for transporting substances.
    • Eg, traveling in columns up the xylem in plants.
  • Strong cohesion leads to high surface tension when it comes into contact with air.
    • So sweat forms droplets, which evaporate from the skin to cool an organism down.
    • Pond skaters and other insects can also ‘walk’ on the surface of a pond.
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16
Q

What is cohesion?

Why is water cohesive?

A

The tendency of molecules to stick together.

Water molecules are cohesive because they are polar.

17
Q

What is surface tension?

What does this mean for water?

A

The force that pulls water molecules back into the body of water when they meet air - as opposed to them evaporating.

This means the surface of water acts like a skin, and is strong enough to support small organisms like pond skaters.