AP BIO Unit 1

Subdecks (1)

Cards (187)

  • What are all substances made up of?
    Atoms
  • Why are atom molecules necessary?
    They are necessary to build new molecules
  • What is the composition of a hydrogen atom?
    1 proton and 1 electron
  • What is the composition of an oxygen atom?
    8 protons, 8 neutrons, and 8 electrons
  • What determines the kind of bond formed between atoms?
    Electron number and arrangements
  • What are the types of chemical bonds?

    • Hydrogen bond: Between partially charged atoms
    • Ionic bond: Metal donates an atom to a nonmetal
    • Covalent bond: Nonmetals share electrons
    • Metallic bond: Holds atoms in metallic substances
  • What is a hydrogen bond?
    It forms when two partially negative charged hydrogens and one partially positive oxygen bond covalently
  • How does an ionic bond form?
    A metal atom donates an atom to a nonmetal atom
  • What characterizes a covalent bond?
    Two nonmetals share electrons
  • What is a metallic bond?
    It is the force that holds atoms together in a metallic substance
  • Why is water considered polar?
    Because it has hydrogen bonds
  • What are the properties of water?
    • Cohesion: Water molecules stick to each other
    • Adhesion: Water sticks to other molecules
    • Surface tension: Resistance to being stretched
    • Unusual phase change: Density decreases when frozen
  • What is cohesion in water?
    It is the tendency of hydrogen molecules to stick to each other through hydrogen bonding
  • What is adhesion in water?
    It is the tendency of hydrogen to stick to other molecules via hydrogen bonding
  • What causes surface tension in water?
    Hydrogen bonds resisting being stretched due to water's polarity
  • What is unusual about water's phase change when it freezes?
    Its density lessens, unlike other solids
  • What is ionization?
    It is the process in which an atom or molecule acquires a charge by losing or gaining electrons
  • What is high heat of vaporization?
    It is the amount of energy needed to change one gram of a liquid to gas at constant temperature
  • What does high specific heat mean for water?
    It takes more energy to increase the temperature of water compared to other substances
  • Why is water considered a versatile solvent?
    It is excellent at dissolving polar molecules
  • What happens when water ionizes?
    It produces hydroxyl ions
  • How many hydrogen bonds can one water molecule form?
    Up to 4 hydrogen bonds
  • How do organisms interact with their environment?
    • Exchange matter to grow
    • Reproduce
    • Maintain organization
  • What are the main elements of life represented by CHONPS?
    Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, and Sulfur
  • What is the role of carbon in biological molecules?
    It is used to build biological molecules like carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids
  • In what forms is carbon used in organisms?
    In macromolecules, storage molecules, and cell formation
  • What is phosphorus used for in biological systems?
    To build nucleic acids
  • What is nitrogen's role in biological molecules?
    It is used to build proteins and nucleic acids
  • What are lipids and their characteristics?
    • Nonpolar molecules
    • Include fats, oils, waxes
    • Composed of fatty acids and glycerol
  • What are saturated fats?
    Fats with no double bonds, solid at room temperature
  • What are unsaturated fats?
    Fats with one or more double bonds, liquid at room temperature
  • What is the structure of triglycerides?
    Three fatty acids bonded with glycerol
  • What are proteins made of?
    Amino acids
  • How many essential amino acids are there?
    9 essential amino acids
  • What are the four levels of protein structure?
    Primary, Secondary, Tertiary, Quaternary
  • What happens to denatured proteins?
    They do not work
  • What determines the properties of biological molecules?
    • Subcomponents of molecules
    • Sequence of subcomponents
  • What is a monomer?
    A subunit that serves as a building block for polymers
  • What is a polymer?
    A large molecule made up of many similar/identical monomers linked together
  • What is the monomer of proteins?
    Amino acids