Molecules Essays

  • Detection Of Biological Molecules

    1482 Words  | 3 Pages

    Biological Molecules Introduction: Without carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, sulfur, oxygen and phosphorus, life wouldn't exist. These are the most abundant elements in living organisms. These elements are held together by covalent bonds, ionic bonds, hydrogen bonds, and disulfide bonds. Covalent bonds are especially strong, thus, are present in monomers, the building blocks of life. These monomers combine to make polymers, which is a long chain of monomers strung together. Biological molecules can be distinguished

  • Caffeine: Experiment 5 Covalent Molecules

    518 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jacob Helget Experiment 5 Covalent Molecules Section 12 – Thursday 2:00-4:45 Lab Instructor: William Bott Caffeine Caffeine is a very interesting chemical. Caffeine is found in many places including coffee plant, tea leaves, kola nuts and cocoa (1). Humans then process these plants into food stuff that contains caffeine such as tea, coffee and chocolate. Caffeine is composed of 14 atoms with a molecular formula of C8H10N4O2. It is one of the few central nervous system stimulants still legal in

  • The Spirit Molecule (DMT): An Endogenous Psychoactive

    1508 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Spirit Molecule (DMT): An Endogenous Psychoactive "The feeling of doing DMT is as though one had been struck by noetic lightning. The ordinary world is almost instantaneously replaced, not only with a hallucination, but a hallucination whose alien character is its utter alienness. Nothing in this world can prepare one for the impressions that fill your mind when you enter the DMT sensorium."- McKenna. N,N-dimethyltryptamine(DMT) is a psychoactive chemical in the tryptamine family, which

  • Viruses: Complex Molecules Or Simple Life Forms?

    752 Words  | 2 Pages

    Viruses: Complex Molecules or Simple Life Forms? Viruses have been defined as "entities whose genomes are elements of nucleic acid that replicate inside living cells using the cellular synthetic machinery, and cause the synthesis of specialised elements that can transfer the genome to other cells." They are stationaryand are unable to grow. Because of all these factors, it is debatable whether viruses are the most complex of molecules or the simplest life forms. While the definition of living organisms

  • The Transfer of Energy During Heating of Large Molecules

    823 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Transfer of Energy During Heating of Large Molecules AIM: The aim of this investigation is, to find out which molecules transfer the most energy. PREDICTION: I predict that as the numbers of particles are increased, the energy transferred will also be increased. We will use methanol, ethanol, propanol, butonol and octanol. The word and symbol equations for these reactions are: Methanol: Methanol + oxygen carbon dioxide + water ========================================

  • The Activation Energy for the Molecule of HALS Reaction using GAUSSIAN 09 via the WebMO Interface

    877 Words  | 2 Pages

    level of theory(B3LYP). Therefore, the protonated nitrogen of the HALS molecule had higher energy than the neutral nitrogen through the potential energy of the reaction. Accordingly, the hypothesis that was reported becomes incorrect against to the calculation result found it from Gaussian program. 4.2 The aim of calculation the activation energy The objective of this report is to calculate the activation energy for the molecule of HALS reaction using GAUSSIAN 09 via the WebMO interface. There have

  • The History Of Molecules

    1298 Words  | 3 Pages

    Idaho, 2014) Molecules, as small as they seem, is in the food that we eat and present in our daily lives. Today, scientists would likely know about the history of chemistry but not how chemistry has impacted history. Many would not wonder if these molecules go beyond the chemistry concepts that they have learned. For example, would the world have been different if piperine (molecule) present in pepper had not led to the discovery of the United States? The interesting fact is that molecules have and will

  • Life as a water molecule

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    my story starts on the atlantic ocean bouncing around the waves from the crest to the trough going up and down the wave height and wave length. then all of the sudden thousands of molecules started evaporating into the air and turning into a different form of molecule we were condensating then we started transport into water droplets then we precipitated back into the water but this time closer to the shore of a . the water was still and not moving. moon came out brighter than ever being full the

  • Molecules Monologue

    614 Words  | 2 Pages

    It's impressive. That. One. Last. Molecule. And everything as it was will seize and transform. Precision amongst what seems to be chaos, something new is born from that calculated dance. I've often had to covertly wipe the tears from my eyes as I sit, surrounded by my seemingly unmoved peers

  • Organic Molecules Experiment

    1384 Words  | 3 Pages

    During the Organic Molecules experiment, four reagents were used to test for the presence of three of the four basic categories of Organic Molecules, carbohydrates, lips, and proteins, in control substances and Cheerios. For carbohydrates, I was testing, specifically, for the presence of reducing (polysaccharides) and non-reducing sugars (monosaccharides). Carbohydrates, both reducing and non-reducing, are important to the cell because they act as an energy source and are an important factor in building

  • How Water Is Related To Chemistry

    949 Words  | 2 Pages

    How Water Is Related To Chemistry Water is a polar solvent, its molecule is covalently bonded that makes up for an unequal sharing of the electrons resulting in partially positive and partially negative water molecule. Organic molecules like Ethane and many other molecules are non-polar, that is they neither have a positive nor a negative end. As a result, he individual molecules within the water are greatly interconnected because of the presence of weak hydrogen bonds. Water acts as a universal

  • A Justification of Luca Turin’s Vibrational Theory of Scent

    1538 Words  | 4 Pages

    do we, humans, smell?” As for the answer to this question, there are two main theories which should be mentioned. The first is a theory based on the idea that the shape of a molecule determines it’s scent in the human nose (TED). The second such answer is the theory that smell is linked to the vibrational frequency of a molecule (TED). This latter notion is one argued effectively by Luca Turin, a biophysicist who is part of the perfuming business (TED). Turin is the chief modern scientist when it comes

  • The Chemical Properties of Water

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    would not have been possible. This essay will examine the water molecule in order to ascertain how it brought about Earth's thriving ecosystem and how important it is to us today. Each water molecule consists of one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms. The oxygen atom (or the apex of the water molecule) bears a slight electronegative charge while hydrogen possesses a more positive one. Because opposite charges attract, the water molecules are drawn together. When an oxygen atom is linked to a neighboring

  • Gas: The Kinetic Molecular Theory

    1245 Words  | 3 Pages

    of three states of matter. The gas state is composed of a group of molecules that move freely, independent of each other. There are certain properties that define gas and separate the state of matter from the other two states: solid and liquid. Many different energies, forces, and amounts greatly affect the behavior of any type of gas. These differences consist of pressure, temperature, volume and even the number of molecules of a gaseous element. There is a mathematical relationship between

  • The Effect of a Concentration of Water on the Mass of a Potato

    1573 Words  | 4 Pages

    Osmosis is explained below Osmosis Osmosis is the passage of water molecules from a region of their high concentration to a region of their low concentration through a partially permeable membrane. It is best regarded as a form of diffusion in which only water molecules move. For example look at Figure 2. The solute molecules are too large to pass through the pores in the membrane, so the movement of water molecules can only achieve equilibrium. Solution A has the higher concentration of

  • Essay On Absorption Chromatography

    567 Words  | 2 Pages

    adsorption to stationary phase move faster and eluted out first while those with greater adsorption affinity move or travel slower and get eluted out last. Adsorption chromatography is used mostly to separate low molecular compounds such as organic molecules after organic synthesis that will bind to stationary phase with varying strength of intermolecular force. Gas-Liquid chromatography Gas-Liquid Chromatography utilizes the principle of the difference in solubility of the components of gas mixture

  • Osmosis and Diffusion Investigation

    558 Words  | 2 Pages

    [IMAGE][IMAGE] The potassium permanganate will have spread throughout the beaker as the water molecules are constantly moving around. Step 3: Q5. The salt that was placed on the egg turned into ‘sweat’ like beads on the egg. Q6. There is a higher water concentration inside the egg, causing the water to travel through the egg to the salt. The salt creates osmotic pressure on the water molecules in the egg. This causes the ‘sweat’ like beads on the egg. Salt Egg Water [IMAGE][IMAGE]

  • Analysis Of Hydrate

    1055 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction Hydrates are compounds that form crystals that have water molecules in their structure. Barium chloride dihydrate, or BaCl2●2H2O is an example of this, with five water molecules for every one molecule of barium chloride. The water is called the water of hydration, and the dot between the barium chloride and the water molecules means that the two types of molecules are bonded together. The water of hydration is heated out of the hydrate when the temperature reaches above 100℃, since

  • Total Synthesis of CP Compounds

    505 Words  | 2 Pages

    and sarcodictyins, the antibiotic vancomycin, the cholesterol-lowering CP-molecules, the immunosuppressant agent sanglifehrin A, the antibiotic everninomicin, and a number of bisorbicillinoids such as trichodimerol, bisorbicillinol, and bisorbibutenolide. Another example of Dr. Nicolaou's work is a paper published in Chemistry International entitled The Absolute Configuration and Asymmetric Total Synthesis of the CP Molecules (co-authored by Jae-Kyu Jung, Won Hyung Yoon, Yun He, Yong-Li Zhong, and

  • Ozone Depletion

    1222 Words  | 3 Pages

    Arctic region.1 Ozone gas contains an extraneous oxygen atom in each molecule and is highly unstable. This property lets ozone block out ultraviolet rays and makes it an essential part of the eco-system. When harmful ultraviolet-B rays (wavelength 240-320 NM) come through the atmosphere, the O3 molecules absorb the energy and one oxygen atom detaches from the molecule. The stray atom will eventually collide with another O2 molecule and ozone will be reformed. With this process, the level of ozone remains