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UNIT 1 EXAM 1 REVIEW

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UNIT 1 EXAM 1 REVIEW

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Exam 1 Material (Gen. Biology – Intro to the Cell)
BASIC CHEMISTRY:

 Which elements make up 96% of living matter?
 Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, and Carbon
 What are Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons?
 PROTON: a subatomic particle with a single positive electrical charge with a mass of about 1.7 ×10−24 g
(or 1 Dalton), and is found in the nucleus of an atom.
 NEUTRON: a subatomic particle having no electrical charge (electrically neutral), with a mass of about
−24
1.7 ×10 g (or 1 Dalton), and is found in the nucleus of an atom.
1
 ELECTRON: a subatomic particle with a single negative electrical charge and a mass about that of
2,000
a neutron or proton (or 1/2000 Dalton). One or more electrons move around the nucleus of an atom.
 What is an element’s atomic number, atomic mass, and mass number?
 ATOMIC NUMBER: indicates how many PROTONS are in its nucleus.
 MASS NUMBER: the sum of PROTONS + NEUTRONS in its’ nucleus.
 ATOMIC MASS: equivalent to the mass number, an approximation of the total mass of the atom.
 What are isotopes? What is the difference between stable isotopes and a radioactive isotope? How can each be
used in research?
 ISOTOPES: Isotopes are different forms of the same element. They have the same number of PROTONS
but a different number of NEUTRONS.
 STABLE ISOTOPES: Isotopes whose nuclei do not have a tendency to lose subatomic particles
 RADIOACTIVE ISOTOPES: an isotope (an atomic form of a chemical element) that is unstable; the
nucleus decays spontaneously, giving off detectable particles and energy.
 What is an electron shell? How many electrons can each of the first three shells hold? What is the difference
between a shell and an orbital?
 ELECTRON SHELL: an energy level of electrons at a characteristic average distance from the nucleus of
an atom.
 ORBITAL: the three-dimensional space where an electron is found 90% of the time.
 What is a valence shell? How do you figure out how many electrons are in an atom’s valence shell?
 VALENCE SHELL: the number of electrons in the outermost shell of an atom that effects the chemical
behavior of an atom.
 VALENCE ELECTRONS: electrons in the valence shell
 What are the different types of bonds and what is the difference between them?
 COVALENT BOND: when two atoms share one or more pairs of valence electrons
 POLAR COVALENT BOND: the result of unequal sharing of electrons
 EXAMPLE



.




1

,  A covalent bond between atoms that differ in electronegativity. The shared electrons are
pulled closer to the more electronegative atom, making it slightly negative, and the other atom
slightly positive.
 NONPOLAR COVALENT BOND: a type of covalent bond in which electrons are shared equally
between two atoms of similar electronegativity.
 EXAMPLE




 IONIC BOND: a bond formed between oppositely charged ions. (Ions are atoms that have gained or lost
one or more electrons, thus acquiring a charge).
 CATION: a positively charged ion
 ANION: a negatively charged ion
 IONIC BOND DIAGRAM




 HYDROGEN BOND: a weak chemical bond between a hydrogen atom and an electronegative atom on a
different molecule.
 HYDROGEN BOND DIAGRAM/EXAMPLE




 VAN DER WAALS INTERACTIONS: weak forces that result when electrons, by chance, become unevenly
distributed, forming regions of positive and negative charges, allowing atoms and molecules to stick to
each other.
 VAN DER WAALS INTERACTION DIAGRAM/EXAMPLE




2

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Uploaded on
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General biology - intro to the cell
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