Water Basics
Solutions, pH, pOH
Acids and Bases
Macromolecules
Food Identification
100

What property allows water to dissolve many substances?

Polarity

100

Q: A solution with pH below 7 is called what?

Acid

100

Q: What tool is used to measure a solution’s pH?

pH paper or litmus paper

100

Q: Which macromolecule provides quick energy?

Carbohydrates

100

Q: Bread, pasta, and rice are examples of which macromolecule group?

Carbohydrates

200

Q: A water molecule has a slightly negative charge near which atom?

Oxygen

200

Q: A solution with pH above 7 is classified as what?

Base

200

Q: Lower pH means the solution is...

Stronger acid

200

Q: Which macromolecule stores genetic information?

Nucleic Acid

200

Q: Chicken, eggs, and beans are high in which macromolecule?

Proteins

300

Q: Why is water called the universal solvent?

A: It dissolves more substances than any other liquid.

300

Q: What is the relationship between pH and pOH?
pH+pOH=X

X=14

300

Q: If a solution has pH 7, it is classified as what?

Neutral

300

Q: Which macromolecule builds muscle and enzymes?

Proteins

300

Q: What macromolecule is found in foods like avocado and butter?

Lipids

400

Q: How does polarity help water transport nutrients in living organisms?

A: It allows water to attract and carry ions and molecules.

400

Q: If solution A has pH of 3, what is its pOH?

11

400

Q: Which chemical has pH 3: Potassium Acid, 3 percent hydrogen peroxide, or boric acid?

Potassium Acid

400

Q: Which macromolecule includes fats and oils?

Lipids

400

Q: If you ate eggs and toast for breakfast, list the macromolecule each belongs to.

A: Eggs: protein. Toast: carbohydrate.

500

Q: Predict one consequence for life on Earth if water were not polar.

A: It would not dissolve key substances, and life processes would not function.

500

Q: Rank these from strongest acid to strongest base: pH 4, pH 9, pH 3.

A: pH 3 (strongest acid), pH 4, pH 9 (strongest base).

500

Q: Explain how pH and pOH confirm each other when identifying a solution.

A: Their values add to 14, so one validates if the other matches acid or base strength.

500

Q: Name one function of lipids besides storing energy.

Insulation

500

Q: Build a balanced meal that contains at least one carbohydrate, one protein, one lipid, and one nucleic acid source.

A: Example: Rice (carb), chicken (protein), avocado (lipid), fruit or vegetables (nucleic acids).