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Bio Chapter 2

Matter- anything that occupies space and has mass.
Mass- a measure of the amount of material in an
object
Element- a substance that cannot be broken
down into other substances by chemical reactions

Trace elements- required in only very small
amounts and are essential for life

Compounds- substances that contain two or more elements in a
fixed ratio

Atom- is the smallest unit of matter

Proton- is positively charged
Electron- is negatively charged
Neutron- is electrically neutral

Atomic number- All atoms of a particular element have the same unique
number of protons

Mass number- the sum of the number of protons and neutrons in its nucleus

Isotopes- have the same number of protons and
behave identically in chemical reactions, but they
have different numbers of neutrons
Radioactive isotope- one in which the nucleus
decays spontaneously

Chemical bonds- atoms staying close together, held by attractions

Ions- atoms or molecules that are electrically
charged as a result of gaining or losing electrons
Ionic bonds- formed between oppositely charged
ions
Ionic compounds- held together by ionic bonds

Covalent bond- forms when two atoms share one or
more pairs of electrons

  • are the strongest bond

  • holds atoms together in a molecule

Molecule- group of atoms

polar molecule- one with an uneven distribution of charge
hydrogen bonds- weak electrical attractions due to the polarity of water

chemical reactions- changes in the chemical composition of matter
reactants- the starting materials
products- the end materials

water content in cells- 70-95%

cohesion- tendency of molecules of the same kind to stick
together

Evaporative cooling- when a substance
evaporates and the surface of the liquid remaining
behind cools down

solution- a liquid consisting of a homogeneous
mixture of two or more substances

solvent- dissolving agent

solute- what’s being dissolved

solution- resulting mixture

aqueous solution- when water is the solvent

acid- releases H

base- accepts H and removes it from a solution

pH scale- measurement of the hydrogen ion H concentration in a solution

buffer- minimizes changes in pH

M

Bio Chapter 2

Matter- anything that occupies space and has mass.
Mass- a measure of the amount of material in an
object
Element- a substance that cannot be broken
down into other substances by chemical reactions

Trace elements- required in only very small
amounts and are essential for life

Compounds- substances that contain two or more elements in a
fixed ratio

Atom- is the smallest unit of matter

Proton- is positively charged
Electron- is negatively charged
Neutron- is electrically neutral

Atomic number- All atoms of a particular element have the same unique
number of protons

Mass number- the sum of the number of protons and neutrons in its nucleus

Isotopes- have the same number of protons and
behave identically in chemical reactions, but they
have different numbers of neutrons
Radioactive isotope- one in which the nucleus
decays spontaneously

Chemical bonds- atoms staying close together, held by attractions

Ions- atoms or molecules that are electrically
charged as a result of gaining or losing electrons
Ionic bonds- formed between oppositely charged
ions
Ionic compounds- held together by ionic bonds

Covalent bond- forms when two atoms share one or
more pairs of electrons

  • are the strongest bond

  • holds atoms together in a molecule

Molecule- group of atoms

polar molecule- one with an uneven distribution of charge
hydrogen bonds- weak electrical attractions due to the polarity of water

chemical reactions- changes in the chemical composition of matter
reactants- the starting materials
products- the end materials

water content in cells- 70-95%

cohesion- tendency of molecules of the same kind to stick
together

Evaporative cooling- when a substance
evaporates and the surface of the liquid remaining
behind cools down

solution- a liquid consisting of a homogeneous
mixture of two or more substances

solvent- dissolving agent

solute- what’s being dissolved

solution- resulting mixture

aqueous solution- when water is the solvent

acid- releases H

base- accepts H and removes it from a solution

pH scale- measurement of the hydrogen ion H concentration in a solution

buffer- minimizes changes in pH