To make sure our enzyme experiments are spot on, we need to measure accurately and repeat our experiments. 🧪
Independent Variables
🌡️ Real-world example: Picture making a cup of tea. If you want to see how temperature affects how quickly a tea bag steeps, you change the water temperature (that’s your independent variable)!
Control Variables
💡Tip: It's like making sure the wind doesn't interfere in your outdoor ping pong game.
Dependent Variables
💧Example: In our tea scenario, this would be the color or strength of your tea!
How do we calculate? Measure speed at which substrates turn into products.
Units: change in amount of chemical divided by time, like mmols^(-1).
Methods
Set time, measure substrate or product.
Start with substrate and measure time to complete reaction.
🍕 Real-world example: Think of how fast you eat a pizza slice. If you eat half in 1 min, your "reaction rate" is 0.5 slices/min!
What’s Catalase? Enzyme that turns toxic hydrogen peroxide into water + oxygen.
Sources? Yeast, liver, kidney, seeds.
How to measure its activity? Check apparatus in Figure 19.
Things to ponder
🐱 Fun fact: Your pet cat’s liver has catalase! But please, no liver experiments on Mr. Whiskers.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Biology HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟
To make sure our enzyme experiments are spot on, we need to measure accurately and repeat our experiments. 🧪
Independent Variables
🌡️ Real-world example: Picture making a cup of tea. If you want to see how temperature affects how quickly a tea bag steeps, you change the water temperature (that’s your independent variable)!
Control Variables
💡Tip: It's like making sure the wind doesn't interfere in your outdoor ping pong game.
Dependent Variables
💧Example: In our tea scenario, this would be the color or strength of your tea!
How do we calculate? Measure speed at which substrates turn into products.
Units: change in amount of chemical divided by time, like mmols^(-1).
Methods
Set time, measure substrate or product.
Start with substrate and measure time to complete reaction.
🍕 Real-world example: Think of how fast you eat a pizza slice. If you eat half in 1 min, your "reaction rate" is 0.5 slices/min!
What’s Catalase? Enzyme that turns toxic hydrogen peroxide into water + oxygen.
Sources? Yeast, liver, kidney, seeds.
How to measure its activity? Check apparatus in Figure 19.
Things to ponder
🐱 Fun fact: Your pet cat’s liver has catalase! But please, no liver experiments on Mr. Whiskers.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Biology HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟