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Environmental Science Geology 1401410 Instructor: Don Thieme

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5th Lecture: Chemical Reactions, Organic Compounds, and Biogeochemical Cycles ... on the concentration of the two reactants as well as their chemical properties ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Science Geology 1401410 Instructor: Don Thieme


1
Environmental ScienceGeology 1401-410Instructor
Don Thieme
  • 5th Lecture Chemical Reactions, Organic
    Compounds, and Biogeochemical Cycles

2
An atom is the smallest particle that exhibits
the characteristics of an element. Atoms are
composed of positively charged protons,
negatively charged electrons, and electrically
neutral neutrons.
3
Charge
  • an atom is electrically neutral when it has the
    same number of protons and electrons
  • positive charge occurs when an atom loses one or
    more electron
  • negative charge occurs when an atom gains one or
    more electron
  • charged atoms are called ions

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Electronegativity
  • the ability of an atom to attract valence
    electrons toward its nucleus
  • increases toward the upper right of the periodic
    table because
  • atomic mass is highest within period
  • distance of valence electrons from nucleus is
    lowest within group

6
Important Elements
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Chemical Bonds
  • hold molecules together
  • ionic
  • the most stable
  • cation charge of metal atoms exactly balanced by
    anion charge of nonmetal atoms (NaCl combines Na
    and Cl-)
  • covalent
  • join two or more nonmetal ions

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10
Molecules held together by covalent bonds are
common constituents of the Earth's atmosphere
11
Names of Ionic Compounds
  • name of metal element comes first
  • followed by nometal element's name
  • "ide" for ionic bond
  • potassium chloride (KCl)
  • aluminum oxide (Al2O3)
  • calcium fluoride (CaF2)
  • charge may be indicated two ways
  • ferrous chloride - Fe(II)Cl
  • ferric chloride - Fe(III)Cl

12
Chemical Reactions
  • Chemical bonds are stretched, broken, and
    reformed by reactions between atoms and compounds
  • Energy is required for a chemical reaction to
    place. This is referred to as the activation
    energy.
  • Energy is released when bonds are broken,
    typically as heat.

13
Concentration and Activity
  • whether or not a reaction will occur depends on
    the concentration of the two reactants as well as
    their chemical properties
  • the effects of concentration for various
    molecules are referred to as their activity (a)
  • a the number of moles per cubic centimeter
    (mol cm-3)

14
Combustion of Methane
  • CH4 2 O2 - - - gt CO2 2 H2O
  • (reactants) (products)
  • balanced equation - the same number of each
    kind of atom appears on both sides

15
Oxidation of Iron
4
3
2
___ Fe ___ O2 - - - gt ___ Fe2O3
Each iron (Fe) atom gives up three electrons to
form the bond.
16
Photosynthesis
6
12
___ H2O __ CO2 light energy - - - gt
__ O2
__ C6H12O6 __ H2O
1
6
6
(glucose)
17
Solar Energy
  • Sun reaches 15 million Kelvin
  • fusion of H to He
  • emits full spectrum of electromagnetic energy
  • from 0.01 nm (gamma rays) to 10 cm (radio waves)

18
Electromagnetic spectrum
  • solar energy in and near the wavelengths of
    visible light drives photosynthesis and many
    other chemical reactions on Earth

19
Photosynthesis is actually a series
of light-dependent reactions occurring within
the cells of plants. Chloroplasts are
the organelles responsible. The chlorophyll
molecule acts as catalyst but the reactions
occur in many other molecules. Glucose and
other sugars are "high-energy intermediaries"
that are broken down by plants.
20
Cellular Respiration
C6H12O6 6 O2 - - - gt 6 H2O 6 C O2
energy
Energy is released by respiration, whereas in
photosynthesis energy is captured.
21
Organic Compounds
  • large molecules built around atoms of carbon (C)
  • chains, rings, or some combination of both
  • H, O, N, P, and K are other elements that
    commonly occur in organic molecules

22
Organic Compounds
23
Polar and Nonpolar Bonds
  • Covalent bonds are nonpolar if shared electrons
    fit midway between the two nuclei - O2, N2, Cl2
  • When one nucleus has greater charge, the electron
    will move closer to the more electronegative atom
  • some polar molecules - HF, H20, CH3Cl

24
Polar Organic Compounds
  • many of the properties of organic compounds are
    the result of the polarity of covalent chemical
    bonds within their molecules
  • polar molecules have higher melting and boiling
    points
  • CH3Cl methyl chloride
  • CH3OH methyl alcohol (methanol)

25
CH3OH
ball and stick
H
H
C - O
H -
space filling
H
26
Hydrocarbons (lipids)
  • built upon a chain of carbon atoms

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IUPAC
  • International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry
  • rules for naming organic compounds
  • for hydrocarbons attach the suffix -ane to a
    prefix denoting the number of carbons (n) in the
    compound
  • methane(1), ethane(2), propane(3), butane(4),
    pentane(5), hexane(6), heptane(7), octane(8),
    nonane(9), decane(10)

29
Carbohydrates
  • rings or chains
  • of C atoms

30
Proteins
  • chains of amino acids.
  • Nitrogen (N) is an important component
  • of proteins

31
Nucleic Acids
  • chains of nucleotides linked by
  • phosphate-sugar bonds

32
Carbon Cycle
33
Primary Production
  • photosynthesizing organisms, particularly plants,
    are the primary producers in an ecosystem
  • organisms that do not photosynthesize are
    consumers
  • consumers break down the high-energy
    intermediaries, use up oxygen, and emit carbon
    dioxide to the atmosphere.

34
CARBON CYCLE begins with photo- synthetic
organisms taking up CO2 high-energy
intermediates are more rapidly recycled
than hydrocarbon (CH2 and CH3)
molecules carbonate (CO3) and bicarbonate
(HCO3) molecules
35
Chloroplasts are specialized organelles for Photos
ynthesis
Mitochondria are specialized organelles for
Aerobic Respiration, regulated by enzymes.
36
Nitrogen
  • 78 of the lower atmosphere
  • NO nitric oxide
  • N2O nitrous oxide
  • NO2 nitrogen dioxide
  • NO3 nitrate
  • HNO3 nitric acid
  • NH3 ammonia
  • NH4 ammonium

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38
Nitrogen Cycle
  • Plants cannot use N2. They use nitrogen "fixed"
    by bacteria
  • cyanobacteria (bluegreen algae) and bacteria that
    live on legume (bean) roots combine gaseous N2
    and H2O to make ammonia (NH3)
  • "Nitrification" (NH3 to NO3)
  • 1. Nitrosomos oxidizes NH4 to NO2
  • 2. Nitrobacter oxidizes NO2 to NO3
  • rate for 2 is more rapid than 1, so NO2 is found
    only in trace amounts

39
Bacteria that cycle Nitrogen
  • nitrogen-fixing bacteria combine combine gaseous
    N2 and H2O to make ammonia (NH3)
  • nitrifying bacteria oxidize ammonia to make
    nitrates
  • denitrifying bacteria break down nitrate (NO3)
    into N2 and nitrous oxide (N2O)

40
N in Organic Molecules
  • N combines with C (H, O, etc....) to form many
    organic molecules
  • amino acids
  • peptides
  • proteins
  • CH3CH2NH2 methyl ethyl amine
  • C6H5NH2 aniline

41
Liebig's Law
  • first stated by the botanist Justus Liebig in
    1840.
  • the growth of a plant is dependent on the amount
    of foodstuff which is presented to it in minimum
    quantity.
  • Liebig's "law of the minimum"

42
Limiting Nutrients
  • the nutrient "presented in minimum quantity"
  • the "limiting" nutrient for primary production in
    an ecosystem
  • typically is P on land and in freshwater aquatic
    system
  • may be N, particularly in coastal ecosystems

43
Phosphorus Cycle
  • P is not available in the atmosphere
  • P is stored in mineral form in marine sedimentary
    rocks and some igneous rocks
  • P is usually transported in water
  • P is readily metabolized by organisms
  • P is returned to mineral compounds by soil
    weathering

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45
Phosphorus
  • P is very often the "limiting" nutrient for
    primary production
  • abundant P may initiate a "bloom" in algae and
    hydric plants, a form of pollution because it
    uses up all available oxygen

46
Phosphate
  • PO4 is phosphate ion.
  • Some phosphate minerals
  • Ca5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) Apatite
  • Ca5(PO4)3OH Hydroxyapatite
  • Ca5(PO4)3Cl Chlorapatite
  • Ca5(PO4)3Cl Fluorapatite

47
Phosphate
  • Phosphate fertilizers are made by treating
    calcium phosphate (CaPO4) with sulfuric acid
    (H2SO4) to make superphosphate Ca(H2PO4)2
  • Fertilizer phosphate increases the rate of the
    phosphorous cycle because it is more reactive and
    also simply increases the abundance of P in
    terrestrial systems.

48
Sulfur
  • reactive nonmetal
  • rare (0.06 ) in Earth's crust
  • brittle yellow solid precipitated by hot springs
    (hydrothermal)
  • two thirds of the sulfur in the atmosphere comes
    from the eruption of volcanoes

49
Sulfur Compounds
  • H2S hydrogen sulfide
  • FeS2 iron disulfide (pyrite)
  • CaSO4 calcium sulfate (gypsum)
  • SO2 sulfur dioxide
  • SO3 sulfite ion
  • SO4 sulfate ion

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51
Dimethyl Sulfide (DMS)
  • CH3CH3S2
  • produced by ocean plankton, tiny single-celled
    organisms
  • oxidized to SO2 and then SO4
  • nuclei for clouds (sulfate aerosols)
  • may cool the Earth ("feedback" mechanism for
    global climate change)

52
London's "killing fog"
  • winter of 1952
  • warm air descended and trapped cold air near
    ground
  • high sulfur content due to buring of high sulfur
    coal
  • droplets of sulfuric acid
  • SO3 H2O - - - gt H2SO4

53
Acid Rain
  • northeastern United States (Adirondack mountains)
    are downwind of coal-fired power plants (Ohio
    Valley)
  • sulfate aerosols combine with water vapor to form
    sulfuric acid

54
Hydrological Cycle
  • The hydrologic cycle is a summary of the
    circulation of Earths water supply
  • Processes involved in the hydrologic cycle
  • Precipitation
  • Evaporation
  • Infiltration
  • Runoff
  • Transpiration

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P I ET ?SM ?GWS RO where P
precipitation I infiltration ET
evapotranspiration ?SM change in soil
moisture ?GWS groundwater storage RO
runoff to streams and the oceans
57
Reservoirs in the Cycle
The worlds oceans contain over 97 of its
water. Evaporation exceeds precip over
oceans. Precip exceeds evaporation over
land. Balance is allocated to streamflow.
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