CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

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CH339K Lecture 2

Transcript of CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Page 1: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

CH339K

Lecture 2

Page 2: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Bonding

• Covalent• Ionic• Dipole Interactions• Van der Waals Forces• Hydrogen Bonds

Page 3: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Covalent Bonds

• Electrons form new orbitals around multiple atomic nuclei

• Bond energy results from electrostatic force between redefined electron cloud and nuclei

• Strong – typically 150 – 400 kJ/mol

Page 4: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Ionic Interactions

• Energy from non-directional force between ions• Biomolecules frequently have large numbers of charged groups• Charge-charge interactions stabilize intra- and intermolecular

structures• Coulomb’s Law:

• Energy drops off as function of distance between charges

r

qqk U 21

Page 5: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Dipoles• Fixed dipoles

– Molecules with asymmetric charge distributions form dipoles

• Induced Dipoles– One dipole can induce a charge in an adjacent molecule

NH3+

CH2 C O-

O

NH3+

CH2 C O-

O

Page 6: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

van der Waals Interactions• Technically, all induced dipole interactions are van

der Waals interactions• Biochemists usually mean induced dipole-induced

dipole (London Dispersion) forces• Any atom will have an uneven distribution of charge

at any given instant

Page 7: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Van der Waals (cont.)• That temporary dipole will induce a dipole in

adjacent atoms• This results in a net attractive force between

atoms

• Force is weak - .5 to 2 kJ/mol• Net biochemical effect – molecules that FIT

together STICK together.

Page 8: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Van der Waals (cont.)

• If you live in Central Texas, you see van der Waals forces in action every summer night:

Page 9: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Hydrogen Bonds

• Hydrogen Bonds form between– A hydrogen covalently bound to an electronegative

atom

– Another electronegative atom

Page 10: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Hydrogen Bonds (cont.)

• The group to which the hydrogen is covalently bound is the donor.

• The other group is the acceptor.• Donors:

– -OH, -NH2, -SH (lesser donor)

• Acceptors– -N:, =O:, -O:

Page 11: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Hydrogen Bonds (cont.)

• Hydrogen bonds are not just electrostatic – partially covalent

• Therefore, they are directional• Intermdiate strength: 5 – 10 kJ/mol

Page 12: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Water Structure

Page 13: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Water Forms Clusters in Solution

Page 14: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Hydrophobic Effect

Page 15: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Water

• Water– Has a high specific heat– Has a high heat of vaporization– Is an excellent solvent for polar materials– Is a powerful dielectric– Readily forms hydrogen bonds– Has a strong surface tension– Is less dense when it freezes (i.e. ice floats)

Page 16: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Acids and Bases

• Definitions– Arrhenius

– Bronsted-Lowry

– Lewis

Page 17: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Conjugate Pairs• Every acid has its conjugate base• Every base has its conjugate acid

Conjugate Acid Conjugate Base

H3C - COOH H3C-COO-

NH4+ NH3

Page 18: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Acids and bases: pH• Water ionizes

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Typical pH Values

Substance pH

Stomach acid 1.5 - 2.5

Coca-cola 2.5

Human saliva 6.5

Human blood 7.5

Human urine 5 - 8

Oven cleaner 14

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Acids and Bases• Water thus acts as both a weak acid and a

weak base• (A Strong acid is one that dissociates

completely in water; a weak acid is one that doesn’t.)

• All biochemically significant acids and bases are weak (except for HCl – stomach acid)

Page 21: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Acids and Bases

• Just like water, a weak acid has an ion product, the Ka• For the weak acid HA:

• ThereforeO]HA][H[

]A][[H Keq

2

-

[HA]

]][A[H Ka

-

Page 22: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Acids and Bases• Ka’s for weak acids range over several

orders of magnitude• They are generally small• More convenient to define

pKa = -log Ka

• Just like pH = -log[H+]

Page 23: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Typcal Ka’s and pKa’s

Acid Ka pKa

Acetic 1.8 x 10-5 4.74

Formic 1.7 x 10-4 3.77

Benzoic 6.5 x 10-5 4.19

Carbonic 4.3 x 10-7 6.37

Imidazole 2.8 x 10-7 6.55

Phenol 1.3 x 10-10 9.89

Page 24: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

pH for Strong Acids

• Since a strong acid dissociates completely:pH = -log([Acid])

• For a 0.1 M (100 mM) solution of HCl,

pH = -log(0.1) = 1

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pH for Weak Acids

• What’s the pH of a 100 mM solution of Acetic Acid?

])[H- (0.1M

][H

CCOOH][H

]CCOO][H[H101.8

2

3

35

0](0.1)[K][HK][H aa2

2

4(0.1)KKK][H a

2aa

[H+] = 0.00134 M

Page 26: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Shortcut

• The quadratic solution is a pain, but we can approxmate:

(0.1)K[HAc]K][H aa

[H+] = 0.00134 M

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Titrating a Strong Acid

• 10 ml of an HCL sln• Titrate with 0.5 M NaOH

• OH- + H+ –> H2O

• Takes 8.5 ml NaOH to bring solution to neutrality

Titration of Strong Acid

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

0 5 10 15 20

NaOH added (ml)

pH

1

2212211 V

CV Cor CVCV

M 0.425L 0.010

M 0.5 L 0.0085C1

Page 28: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Titrating a Weak Acid• Titrating .1 M Hac• Initial pH is 2.88 instead

of 1• Little change until large

amounts of NaOH have been added

• Buffering effect• Caused by equilibrium

that exists between a weak acid and conjugate base.

Titration of Weak Acid

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 5 10 15 20 25

NaOH added (ml)

pH

Page 29: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Henderson-Hasselbach Equation

[HA]

][AlogpKpH

log[HA]]log[ApKpH

pKlog[HA]]log[A]log[H

pK[HA]

]][A[Hlog

K[HA]

]][A[H

a

a

a

a

a

Page 30: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Predicting pH

• Let’s make 1 liter of a solution that is 0.1 M in acetic acid ( pKa = 4.74 ) and 0.3 M in sodium acetate.

[HA]

][AlogpKpH a

0.1

0.3log4.76pH

5.24pH

Page 31: CH339K Lecture 2. Bonding Covalent Ionic Dipole Interactions Van der Waals Forces Hydrogen Bonds.

Buffering Effect

• Addition of significant amounts of acid or base changes the ratio of conjugate base to conjugate acid

• pH changes as the log of that ratio• Result is resistance to pH change in a

buffered solution