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Summary Molecules of Life

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Contains all the content discussed during the course molecules of life.

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  • May 14, 2021
  • 9
  • 2020/2021
  • Summary
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Molecules of life 2021

Lecture 1

Life is because of molecules. Biology  cell biology  biochemistry (nucleic acids
(DNA/RNA), peptides/proteins).

Molecules are the building blocks of life. Biochemistry under the loop: nucleobases, amino
acids, sugars and morphine.

An inorganic compound (salts or minerals) can become organic when treated with heat.




Understanding organic molecules is important: lidocaine = local anesthetic, diclofenac = pain
medication, B4PyMPM = OLED screens.

The structure of an atom: nucleus (protons (+ charged) + neutrons (neutral)) + an electric
cloud (negative). Neutral atoms: #protons = #electrons. Electrons make up most of the
volume  important for molecule formation.

A closer look at the periodic table:  periods and
downwards are the groups.
Isotopes: same number of protons but different
number of neutrons.

Niels Bohr stated that protons and neutrons are
depicted in the center, and electrons fly around it.

1st shell  2é, 2nd shell  8é, 3rd shell  18é, 4th shell  32é
Electrons are distributed in shells around the core. Shells contain subshells: atomic orbitals.
Relative energy of atomic orbitals: 1s < 2s < 2p < 3s < 3p < 3d.




Core electrons are electrons in the inner shell(s). Valence electrons are electrons in the
outmost shell.

, Ground-state electron configuration: 3 rules
1. Aufbau principle: an electron goes into the atomic orbital with the lowest energy
2. Pauli exclusion principle: no more than two electrons can be in an atomic orbital
3. Hund’s rule: an electron goes into an empty degenerate orbital rather than pairing
up




Losing and gaining electrons: the octet rule. Noble gases do not react under normal
circumstances (group from helium). This has to do with the octet rule: atom is most stable if
the outer shell is filled or empty.

NaCl crystals form through ionic interactions. 

Sharing electrons results in covalent bonds. You have polar and apolar
covalent bonds. Greater dipole moment = more polar. The
electronegativity increases when you go up and to the right in the periodic
table.

When deltaE = bigger dan 2  ionic
When deltaE = between 0.5 and 2  polar bond
When deltaE = lower than 0.5  apolar bond

How many bonds and lone pairs for atoms?
Carbon forms 4 bonds (most of the times).
Nitrogen forms 3 bonds (most of the times) with one lone pair
Oxygen forms 2 bons (most of the times) with 2 lone pairs
Halogens and hydrogen form 1 bond with 3 lone pairs

Formals charge = # of valence electrons – (# lone pair electrons + # of bonds)

Drawing a molecule from its chemical formula:

1. Determine the total number of valence electrons (when there is a formal charge, the
negative should be added, when it is positive moet je m aftrekken)
2. Distribute the atoms
3. Form bonds and fill octets with lone pairs
4. Check for formal charges

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