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Chemistry test 2 Word Scramble

 
 


 

 
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Question Answer
The ability for a given substance, the solute, to dissolve in a solvent. Solubility
Measured in terms of maximum amount of solute dissolved in a solvent at equilibrium.Solubility
The resulting solution is calledSaturated solution
Gas over a liquid at a particular tempHenry's Law
At at a particular temperature the amount of a given gas dissolves in a given liquid is directly proportional to other partial pressure of the gas in equilibrium with the liquidHenry's Law
Particularly relevant to scuba divers Henry's Law
as you increase the pressure linearly for a gas dissolving in a liquid a proportional amount of gas will dissolve in a liquid Henry's Law
Build up saturation of nitrogen, when you resurface to quickly, it comes out of solution in the jts and tissue, this is The Bents or The Caisson's
Henry's Law only applies forconstant temperatures
as temperature increases gases dissolveless
Pressure independent function Ostwald solubility Coefficient
as the ratio of the amount of substance present in one phase compared with another, the two phase being equal volume and equilibriumPartition Coefficients
Which gas is more soluble in the blood:gas coefficients? N2O, ether, halothane What are there bld:gas coefficientsEther (12) Halothane(2.3) N20(0.47)
The greater the insolubility (more equilibrium or speed)the quicker induction rate
Advantage of N20has a quicker induction rate
Disadvantage of N20can lead to diffusion hypoxemia (reverse of 2nd gas effect) tx: extubate with 100% o2
more soluble=more potent oil:gas coefficient (effect)
less anesthetic to achieve desired clinical effectpotency
more insoluble=quicker induction ratebld:gas coefficient(equilibrium or speed)
which gas is more potent in bldEther
which gas is more potent than etherHalothane
on the log scale with gas is most potent on pg 7methoxytilurane
Oxygen dissolves in blood at0.003cc/100cc/mmHg partial pressure
C02 dissolves in blood at0.067cc/100cc/mmHg partial pressure
rate of change of a quantity of any time is proportional to the quantity at that timeexponential process
process by which the molecules of a substance transfer through a layer or area such as the surface of a solutionDiffusion
smaller molecules diffusefaster
rate of diffusion of a substance across a unit area is proportional to the concentration gradientfick's law
this is affected by solubility of gas diffusing into liquid mediumrate of diffusion
Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide rates of diffusion are different therefore more likely to becomehypoxemic
Do liquid or gases take longer to diffuseliquids
Diffusion Rate= Reciprocal of the square root of the molecular weightGraham's Law
what is Graham's law equation1/√MW 1 divided by the square root of MW=molecular wt
Diffusion equation(p1-p2)(area)(solubility)/ (memb. thickness)(√molecular wt)
what is diffusion proportional totension gradient (p1-p2), solubility, and directly proportional to membrane area
what is diffusion inversely proportional tomembrane thickness, the square root of MW of the substance diffusing
usually occurs with a semi permeable membrane, this membrane is semi permeable to one or more solutes.osmosis
moles per literosmolarity
moles per kilogramosmolality
osmotic pressure related to proteinsoncotic pressure
body osmolarity is300mmol per liter
difference in osmolar gradientoncotic pressure
depression of vapor pressure of a solvent is proportional to the molar concentration of solute (measurement of osmolarity)Raoult's Law
factors that effect osmolarityosmotic pressure, freezing pt depression, vapor pressure reduction, and boiling pt elevation. (colligative properties)
a mixture which vaporizes in the same proportion as its constituent volume proportionsAzeotropes
thermal state of a substance, determines whether heat will flow to or from the substanceTemperature
a form of energy, transfer from hotter to cooler substance, energy is in the form of kinetic energyheat
SI unit of temperaturekelvins
determined by general metabolic rate of personheat production
heat production=50 W/m²=80 Watts total
four principle routes with typical heat lossesRadiation, Convection, Evaporation, Respiration
what are the heat losses in percentRadiation 40% Convection 30% Evaporation 20% Respiration 10% (evaporation 8%,heating of air 2%)
carries away heat, cooler object absorbs the heat. occurs in OR accounts for 50% heat lossRadiation
Adjacent layer of air is heated, that heated air rises carrying away heat.Convection
due to loss of latent heat of vaporization (liquid on the skin) as the liquid evaporates it sucks heat out of the bodySurface Evaporation
small part of heat loss, accounts for 8% of humidifying inspired airRespiration
Inspiration of dry anesthetic gases may account for intra-op hypothermia
physiologic control of temp is mediated by hypothalamus
body temp below 35 degrees Chypothermia
fever, may be due to endogenous pyrogens or from bacterial infectionsPyrexia
Succinylcholine and volatile anesthetics are known triggering agents formalignant hyperthermia
occurs when skin at or higher than 45 degrees for prolonged timethermal burns
quantity of heat required to increase the temperature of an objectSpecific heat capacity
SI unit of specific heat capacityJ/(kg k)
amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a given object by 1 kelvinheat capacity
SI unit of heat capacityJ/K Joules per degree of kelvin
amount of heat required to raise the temperature 1 kilogram of a substance by 1 kelvinspecific heat capacity
4.18 Joules =1 calorie
4.18kJ=1 kilocalorie=1C
calculated by knowing the specific heat comtent, mass, and temperaturebody heat content
change of state without change in temperature, requires energylatent heat
joules per secwatts
body generates how many watts?80
energy used when a substance change state from a liquid to a gaslatent heat of vaporization
the heat required to convert 1kg of a substance from one phase to another at a given temp.specific latent heat
SI unit for specific latent heatJkg^-1
at temperature decreases the specific latent heatincreases
N20 critical temperature is36.5
critical temperature for 02-116 C
ways to conserve energy usehumidified gases circle circuit system humidity conservation device
humidity in upper trachea34mg/L (humidify air) 9.6 watts
warming 022 watts
universal gas lawpv=nRt R=0.0821 L atm mol-¹K-¹ p=pressure v=vol n=#'s moles of gas R=gas constant T=temp(K)
the total pressure exerted by a gaseous mixture is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of each individual component in a gas mixture.Dalton's law
SI units for pressurepascals
going form one force to another set of forces is calledVan de Waals Forces
consists of identical particles of zero volume hypothetical gasideal gases
equal vol of gases, at same temp. and pressure contain the same # of particles or moleculesAvogadro's Hypothesis
one mole of ideal gas occupies 22.4 L @STP
how many liters of N20 is in a full tank1590
the uptake of a volatile agent is increased when it is administered simultaneously with N20Second Gas Effect
One mole of particles of solute in 22.4L produces101.35kPa (1atm)
half life =time constant * logℯ=time constant*0.693
pressure=force/area
force=pressure * area
volume=distance*area
distance=volume/area
work=pressuure*vol.