what is the importance of water as a solvent?
explain how water acts as a solvent
Water molecules are polar (charged) and so form
clusters around ions, glucose and amino acids
separating them in solution
what type of molecules will not dissolve in water?
non-polar molecules (hydrophobic) e.g lipids will
not dissolve in water
define the term buffer
chemicals
that resist changes in pH and ensure that a
particular environment maintains a particular
pH
give 2 examples of a buffer
explain the difference of the role of an acidic vs alkaline buffer
A buffer can act as both a base and an acid:
• Act as bases by mopping up hydrogen ions to help
neutralise an acidic solution.
• Act as acids by donating hydrogen ions to help
neutralise an alkali solution.
function of potassium
Is important in maintaining electrical gradients across neurones.
functions of calcium
function of magnesium
. Essential in giving chlorophyll its light absorbing properties.
functions of iron
function of nitrate
Is a component of amino acids, nucleic acids and chlorophyll.
functions of phosphate
function of hydrogen carbonate
Important as a natural buffer
define macromolecules
large molecules e.g sucrose, maltose,
starch, cellulose, glycogen, proteins, triglycerides (lipid),
phospholipids and nucleic acids
define polymers
A large molecule formed of repeating similar
subunits (monomers) – joins by polymerisation
what 3 elements do carbohydrates contain
• Carbon
• Hydrogen
• Oxygen
general formula of carbohydrates
(CH2O)n.
what are monosaccharides
are the basic carbohydrate monomers i.e single (simple) sugars.
what are disaccharides?
are DOUBLE sugars formed form 2 monosaccharides monomers in a condensation reaction
what are polysaccharides?
are complex molecules usually containing of MANY monosaccharide monomers formed in condensation reactions
why is glucose an important monosaccharide
All green leaves make glucose using light energy (photosynthesis).
Our bodies transport glucose in the blood as all cells use it in respiration to release energy (produce ATP) – so are important ENERGY stores in living organisms (‘blood sugar’)
define the term isomer
the same molecular
formula but different structural formula
what is the difference between a- glucose and b- glucose
a- glucose is the basic subunit of complex polysaccharides such as starch and glycogen,
• b- glucose (different functional properties to a- glucose) is the constituent monomer of cellulose
describe formation of disaccharides
The chemical reaction when this happens is called a condensation reaction – one molecule of water is lost
This is a reversible reaction as a disaccharide molecule can be broken down into its constituent monosaccharide monomers in a hydrolysis reaction – one molecule of water is gained. (Hydrolysis reaction is important in the digestion of food)