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Author Capstone Axis

Chapter 9 / 9.9 Chemical Reactions

🎯 Quick Overview Benzenediazonium chloride shows up as a colourless crystal that dissolves in water. Keep it cold to stay safe—warm water quickly breaks it down, and dry crystals fall apart even faster. Benzenediazonium fluoroborate, on the other hand, won’t dissolve in water and stays steady at room temperature. 🌡️:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} ⚡ Two Big Reaction Paths […]

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Chapter 9 / 9.10 Importance of Diazonium Salt in Synthesis of Aromatic Compounds

Diazonium Salts: Your Swiss-Army Knife for Building Aromatic Molecules 🛠️✨ Whenever you see the diazonium group \(\text{–N}_2^+\) on an aryl ring, think of it as a “plug-and-play” handle. You can swap it for many other groups or keep it to make brilliantly coloured dyes. Below are the key tricks you can perform. A. Swapping the

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Chapter 10 / 10.1 Carbohydrates

Unit 10.1 – Carbohydrates 🍚🍯 1. Big Picture 🌟 Plants build carbohydrates and pack them into food like sugarcane, honey, fruits, and grains. They fuel life and give structure to cells. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} Most carbs fit the handy formula \(\mathrm{C}_x(\mathrm{H_2O})_y\), but chemists define them more precisely as optically active poly-hydroxy aldehydes or ketones, or compounds that release

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Chapter 10 / 10.2 Proteins

Proteins – quick and clear notes 🧬 1. Why proteins matter Proteins are the most plentiful biomolecules in living things. You meet them daily in milk, cheese, pulses, peanuts, fish, and meat. They build body tissues, keep reactions running, and power growth. The name comes from the Greek proteios, meaning “primary.” :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} 2. Building blocks:

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Chapter 10 / 10.3 Enzymes

10.3 Enzymes 🔬 1 – Why enzymes matter All the life-giving reactions inside our body (digestion, absorption, energy release) run smoothly at body temperature because of special biocatalysts called enzymes 😊 :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} Almost every enzyme is a globular protein, neatly folded so that just the right part (the active site) meets its matching molecule, or substrate. 2 – Key

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Chapter 10 / 10.5 Nucleic Acid

Unit 10.5 – Nucleic Acids 🧬 1. The Big Picture Traits travel from parents to children through chromosomes in the nucleus, and those chromosomes contain two star molecules: DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid). Because both are long chains of nucleotides, scientists also call them polynucleotides.:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} 2. Building Blocks Ingredients after complete hydrolysis: a pentose

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Chapter 10 / 10.6 Hormones

Hormones: Key Concepts 😊 What Are Hormones? Hormones are molecules that act as intercellular messengers. They’re made by endocrine glands and released directly into the bloodstream, which carries them to their target organs :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}. Chemical Nature of Hormones Steroids (e.g., estrogens, androgens) Polypeptides (e.g., insulin, endorphins) Amino‐acid derivatives (e.g., epinephrine, norepinephrine) :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1} Main Functions of

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Chapter 3 / 3.1 Rate of Chemical Reaction

Rate of Chemical Reaction 🚀 Chemistry tracks how quickly molecules change. Some reactions finish in a blink (mix AgNO3 with NaCl and boom—white AgCl forms!), while others crawl along for years (think of iron rusting). You’ll master both the numbers and the big ideas here. Let’s dive in! :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} 1. What do we mean by

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Chapter 7 / 7.3 Structures of Functional Groups

🔥 Structures of Functional Groups (Alcohols, Phenols & Ethers) 1️⃣ Alcohols In alcohols, the –OH group is connected to a carbon atom through a sigma (σ) bond. This bond is made by the overlap of: sp^3 hybridised orbital of carbon sp^3 hybridised orbital of oxygen 🧪 Example: Methanol structure The bond angle in alcohols is

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