Ficha de revisão: Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics in Biology

Bioenergetics Revision Sheet

1. 📌 Essentials

  • Life relies on extraction, transformation, and dissipation within cells- Systems: open (exchange matter/energy), closed (energy only), isolated (no exchange).
  • First law: energy conserved; ΔU = Q + W.
  • Enthalpy (H): heat exchange at constant pressure; ΔH > 0 endothermic, ΔH < 0 exothermic.
  • Spontaneous reactions: ΔG < 0; depend on ΔH and ΔS.
  • Entropy (S): measure of disorder; increases in spontaneous processes.
  • Gibbs free energy (G): ΔG = ΔH - T ΔS; determines reaction spontaneity.
  • Equilibrium: ΔG = 0; ΔG° relates to equilibrium constant K.
  • Redox reactions: electron transfer; characterized by reduction potentials (E°).
  • Energy forms: caloric, electrical, chemical, nuclear, mechanical.
  • Biological systems are open thermodynamic systems constantly exchanging energy and matter.

2. 🧩 Key Structures & Components

  • Cells — basic units performing energy exchange and metabolic reactions.
  • ATP — primary energy currency for cellular work.
  • Redox couples (e.g., NAD/NADH) — facilitate electron transfer.
  • Metabolic pathways — series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions transforming energy.
  • Thermodynamic variables — temperature, pressure, volume, entropy.
  • Reaction intermediates — molecules formed during biochemical reactions.
  • Enzymes — catalyze reactions, influence energy barriers.
  • Energy transfer molecules — ATP, NADH, FADH2.
  • Heat — energy dispersal increasing entropy.
  • Standard conditions — 1 atm, 25°C, 1 M solutions.

3. 🔬 Functions, Mechanisms & Relationships

  • Cells extract energy via oxidation of organic molecules or light absorption.
  • Energy transformations follow thermodynamic laws, with some energy lost as heat.
  • ΔU (internal energy) changes with heat (Q) added and work (W) done.
  • Enthalpy (H) reflects heat exchange at constant pressure; ΔH indicates reaction heat flow.
  • Reactions tend toward lower free energy (ΔG < 0) and higher entropy (ΔS).
  • Spontaneity depends on the balance of ΔH and TΔS.
  • Redox reactions transfer electrons; potentials (E°) determine energy yield.
  • Coupling reactions (e.g., ATP hydrolysis) enable energetically unfavorable processes.
  • Reaction directionality is driven by ΔG; at equilibrium, ΔG = 0.
  • Energy flow in pathways is hierarchical: substrate → intermediates → products.
  • The universe's entropy increases; biological systems maintain order locally by increasing surroundings' entropy.

4. Comparative Table

ItemKey FeaturesNotes / Differences
System TypeOpen: exchanges matter & energy; Closed: energy only; Isolated: noneBiological systems are open
VariablesExtensive: volume, energy; Intensive: temperature, concentrationState-dependent
Transformation TypesIsothermal, isobaric, isochore, adiabaticThermodynamic processes
Enthalpy (ΔH)Heat exchanged at constant pressureΔH > 0 endothermic, ΔH < 0 exothermic
Standard ΔH (ΔH°)At 1 atm, 25°C, 1 M solutionsReference conditions
Hess's LawTotal ΔH = sum of ΔH of stepsAllows indirect calculation
Glucose combustionΔH° = -2808 kJ/molMajor metabolic energy release
ΔG (Gibbs free energy)ΔG = ΔH - T ΔSDetermines spontaneity
Equilibrium constant (K)ΔG° = -RT ln KRelationship with ΔG°
Redox potentials (E°)Electron transfer drives energy releaseNAD/NADH as common pair
ΔG for redox reactionsΔG = -nFΔEn: electrons transferred, F: Faraday

5. 🗂️ Hierarchical Diagram

Bioenergetics
 ├─ Energy Sources
 │   ├─ Phototrophs: light → chemical energy
 │   └─ Chemotrophs: oxidation of organics
 ├─ Thermodynamics
 │   ├─ Systems: open, closed, isolated
 │   ├─ Variables: extensive, intensive
 │   └─ Transformations: isothermal, adiabatic, etc.
 ├─ Equilibrium & Reversibility
 │   ├─ Equilibrium: static/dynamic
 │   └─ Reversible: infinitesimal steps
 ├─ First Law
 │   └─ ΔU = Q + W
 ├─ Enthalpy & Heat
 │   ├─ ΔH: heat at constant P
 │   └─ ΔH reaction: ΔH(products) - ΔH(reactants)
 ├─ Standard & Hess
 │   ├─ ΔH°, ΔG°
 │   └─ Hess's Law
 ├─ Reaction energetics
 │   ├─ Spontaneous if ΔG < 0
 │   └─ ΔG = ΔH - T ΔS
 ├─ Entropy
 │   ├─ Measure of disorder
 │   └─ ΔS = ΔQrev / T
 ├─ Second Law
 │   └─ Universe entropy increases
 ├─ Gibbs Free Energy
 │   ├─ ΔG = ΔH - T ΔS
 │   └─ Equilibrium when ΔG = 0
 └─ Redox & Coupling
     ├─ Electron transfer: Aox/Ared
     └─ ΔG = -nFΔE

6. ⚠️ High-Yield Pitfalls & Confusions

  • Confusing ΔH (enthalpy) with ΔU (internal energy); ΔH includes PV work.
  • Assuming all exergonic reactions are spontaneous without considering entropy.
  • Overlooking the role of entropy (ΔS) in reaction spontaneity.
  • Misinterpreting ΔG as only dependent on ΔH; temperature and entropy are critical.
  • Forgetting that ΔG° relates to equilibrium constant K, but actual ΔG depends on reaction quotient Q.
  • Confusing standard conditions (ΔG°, ΔH°) with actual reaction conditions.
  • Ignoring the importance of coupling reactions for energetically unfavorable processes.
  • Misjudging redox potentials: higher E° means more positive reduction potential.
  • Overestimating the energy yield of redox reactions without considering electron transfer number (n).

7. ✅ Final Exam Checklist

  • Understand the different system types and their relevance to biology.
  • Know the first law: ΔU = Q + W, and how it applies to biochemical reactions.
  • Distinguish between ΔH, ΔS, and ΔG; their signs and implications.
  • Be able to calculate ΔH and ΔG for reactions, including standard conditions.
  • Comprehend Hess's Law for indirect enthalpy calculations.
  • Recognize the significance of ΔG in reaction spontaneity and equilibrium.
  • Understand how energy coupling via ATP or redox reactions drives cellular processes.
  • Know the basics of redox reactions, electron transfer, and reduction potentials.
  • Be familiar with the thermodynamic principles governing metabolic pathways.
  • Recognize the importance of entropy and the second law in biological systems.
  • Be able to interpret energy diagrams, reaction coordinate graphs, and hierarchical structures.

End of Revision Sheet

Teste seu conhecimento

Teste seu conhecimento sobre Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics in Biology com 9 perguntas de múltipla escolha com correções detalhadas.

1. According to the second law of thermodynamics, what is the trend of entropy in the universe?

2. What does the change in Gibbs free energy (ΔG) indicate about a biochemical reaction?

Faça o quiz →

Revisar com flashcards

Memorize os conceitos chave de Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics in Biology com 10 flashcards interativos.

System types — examples?

Open, closed, isolated systems

Life's energy processes?

Extraction, transformation, dissipation.

ΔG — sign for spontaneous?

Negative ΔG indicates spontaneity

Veja os flashcards →

Similar courses

Crie suas próprias fichas de revisão

Importe seu curso e a IA gera fichas, quizzes e flashcards em 30 segundos.

Gerador de fichas