Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

(Steven Felgate) #1

BLBS102-c05 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 12:2 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come


5 Water Chemistry and Biochemistry 85

chemical principles, and water chemistry is a key for the begin-
ning of primitive life forms billions of years ago. The properties
of water molecules give us clues regarding their interactions
with other atoms, ions, and molecules. Furthermore, water va-
por in the atmosphere increases the average temperature of the
atmosphere by 30 K (Wayne 2000), making the earth habitable.
Water remains important for human existence, for food produc-
tion, preservation, processing, and digestion.
Water is usually treated before it is used by food industries.
After usage, wastewaters must be treated before it is discharged
into the ecological system. After we ingest foods, water helps us
to digest, dissolve, carry, absorb, and transport nutrients to their
proper sites. It further helps hydrolyze, oxidize, and utilize the
nutrients to provide energy for various cells, and eventually, it
carries the biological waste and heat out of our bodies. Oxida-
tions of various foods also produce water. How and why water
performs these functions depend very much on its molecular
properties.

THE COMPOUND WATER


Acompoundis a substance that is made up of two or more basic
components calledchemical elements(e.g., hydrogen, carbon,
nitrogen, oxygen, iron) commonly found in food.Wa t e ris one
of the tens of millions of compounds in and on earth.
The chemical equation and thermal dynamic data for the for-
mation of water from hydrogen and oxygen gas is

2H 2 (g)+O 2 (g)+2H 2 O(l),H^0 =− 571 .78 kJ

The equation indicates that 2 mol of gaseous hydrogen, H 2 (g),
react with 1 mol of gaseous oxygen, O 2 (g), to form 2 mol of
liquid water. If all reactants and products are at theirstandard
statesof 298.15 K and 101.325 kPa (1.0 atm), formation of
2 mol of water releases 571.78 kJ of energy, as indicated by the
negative sign forH^0. Put in another way, theheat of formation
of water,Hf^0 ,is−285.89 (=−571.78/2) kJ/mol. Due to the
large amount of energy released, the water vapor formed in the
reaction is usually at a very high temperature compared with its
standard state, liquid at 298.15 K. The heat of formation includes
the heat that has to be removed when the vapor is condensed to
liquid and then cooled to 298.15 K.
The reverse reaction, that is, the decomposition of water, is
endothermic, and energy, a minimum of 285.89 kJ per mole of
water, must be supplied. More energy is required by electrolysis
to decompose water because some energy will be wasted as heat.
A hydrogen-containing compound, when fully oxidized, also
produces water and energy. For example, the oxidation of solid
(s) sucrose, C 12 H 22 O 11 , can be written as

C 12 H 22 O 11 (s)+12O 2 (g)=12CO 2 (g)+11H 2 O(l),
H^0 =−5640 kJ

The amount of energy released,−5640 kJ, is called thestandard
enthalpy of combustionof sucrose. The chemical energy derived
this way can also be used to produce high-energy biomolecules.
When oxidation is carried out in human or animal bodies, the
oxidation takes place at almost constant and low temperatures.

Of course, the oxidation of sucrose takes place in many steps to
convert each carbon to CO 2.

THE POLAR WATER MOLECULES


During the twentieth century, the study of live organisms evolved
from physiology and anatomy to biochemistry and then down
to the molecular level of intermolecular relations and functions.
Atoms and molecules are the natural building blocks of matter,
including that of living organisms. Molecular shapes, structures,
and properties are valuable in genetics, biochemistry, food sci-
ence, and molecular biology, all involving water. Thus, we have
a strong desire to know the shape, size, construction, dimension,
symmetry, and properties of water molecules, because they are
the basis for the science of food and life.
The structure of water molecules has been indirectly studied
using X-ray diffraction, spectroscopy, theoretical calculations,
and other methods. Specific molecular dimensions from these
methods differ slightly, because they measure different proper-
ties of water under different circumstances. However, the O H
bond length of 95.72 pm (1 pm= 10 −^12 m) and the H O H
bond angle of 104.52◦have been given after careful review of
many recent studies (Petrenko and Whitworth 1999). The atomic
radii of H and O are 120 pm and 150 pm, respectively. The bond
length is considerably shorter than the sum of the atomic radii.
Sketches of the water molecule are shown in Figure 5.1 (spher-
ical atoms assumed).
Bonding among the elements H, C, N, and O is the key for bio-
chemistry and life. Each carbon atom has the ability to form four
chemical bonds. Carbon atoms can bond to other carbon atoms
as well as to N and O atoms, forming chains, branched chains,
rings, and complicated molecules. These carbon-containing
compounds are calledorganic compounds, and they include
foodstuff. The elements N and O have one and two more elec-
trons, respectively, than carbon, and they have the capacity to
form only three and two chemical bonds with other atoms.Quan-
tum mechanicsis a theory that explains the structure, energy,
and properties of small systems such as atoms and molecules.

Figure 5.1.Some imaginative models of the water molecule, H 2 O.
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