What are functions of water in living organisms?
What is high specific heat capacity?
The energy neede to raise the temperature of 1gram of a substance by 1 degree C
Why does water have a high specific heat capacity?
Because of its hydrogen bonds. The hydrogen bonds between water molecules can absorb a lot of energy so it takes a lot of energy to heat it up.
Why is having a high specific heat capacity useful?
Because it means water doesn’t experience rapid tempurature changes, making it a good habitat as it means the temperature is more stable.
Describe high latent heat of evaporation?
-It takes a lot of energy (heat) to break the hydrogen bonds, so water has high latent heat of evaporation because a lot of energy is used up when water evaporates.
How is high latent heat of evaporation useful?
It means that water is great for cooling things.
When mammals sweat, the sweat evaporates and cools the skin.
How does waters polarity make it useful?
It makes it cohesive. Water molecules are very cohesive because they are polar.
Why are water molecules polar?
Because they have slightly negatively charged oxygen atoms and slightly positivly charged hydrogen atoms.
Why is water being cohesive useful?
How does waters polarity make it useful?
Makes it a good solvent.
How does waters polarity help it dissolves biological substances effectivly?
How does waters density help make it useful?
Water is less dense at solid than liquid because each water molecule make 4 hydrogen bonds to other water molecules making it a lattice shape.
-Ice floats, meaning it can form an insulating layer at the top of water to maintain the habitat below e.g. top of pond freezes over but bottom doesn’t so creatures don’t freeze
When is water most dense?
At 4 degrees C
Where do the hydrogen bonds occur in water?
H+ and O-
What is a polysaccaride?
A chain on monosaccarides, often a carbohydrate.
Describe the structure of glucose
-A hexose monosaccaride ( monosaccaride with six carbon atoms)
What are the two forms of glucose?
What is the structure of both glucose?
A ring structure
Explain the difference in structure between alpha and beta glucose
How does glucose’s structure make it good for its function?
Describe the structure of ribose
A pentose monosaccaride
What are the 3 elements that all carbohydrates are made up of?
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen
For every carbon atom, generally how many H and O atoms are there?
2 hydrogen and 1 oxygen
What bond joind monosaccarides together
Glycosidic bond