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Water & Solutions

Date post: 16-Feb-2016
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Water & Solutions. Water is a unique molecule necessary for life. found in all cells and surrounds all cells. Polarity. an uneven distribution of shared electrons within the molecule. Hydrogen Bonds. a weak chemical attraction between polar molecules - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Water & Solutions Water is a unique molecule necessary for life. found in all cells and surrounds all cells
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Page 1: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions• Water is a unique molecule necessary

for life.• found in all cells and surrounds all cells

Page 2: Water & Solutions

Polarity• an uneven distribution of shared

electrons within the molecule

Page 3: Water & Solutions

Hydrogen Bonds• a weak chemical attraction between

polar molecules– the attraction between the positively

charged hydrogen of water and the negative charge that exists on other polar molecules including water itself

– due to water’s polarity

Page 4: Water & Solutions

Cohesion and Adhesion• Cohesion

– attraction between molecules of the same substance

• Adhesion– attraction between molecules of different

substances

Page 5: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions

See Figure 5 on textbook page 31

Hydrogen Bonding in Water

Is this cohesion or adhesion?

Page 6: Water & Solutions

Surface Tension• property of the surface of a liquid to resist

an external force– the surface can stretch and will not break

easily– caused by cohesion

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Water & Solutions

Surface Tension

Page 8: Water & Solutions

Capillary Action• process in which water molecules move up

through a narrow tube– the attraction of water to the walls of the tube

and to the other water molecules around it pulls the water up more strongly than gravity pulls it down

– caused by adhesion and cohesion

Page 9: Water & Solutions

Water & SolutionsCapillary Action

Page 10: Water & Solutions

Density• liquid water has a density of 1 g/mL

Page 11: Water & Solutions

Solid form less Dense than Liquid form

• water is rare in that its solid form (ice) is less dense than its liquid form water

Page 12: Water & Solutions

Solid form less Dense than Liquid Form

Page 13: Water & Solutions

Solid form less Dense than Liquid form

• water is rare in that its solid form (ice) is less dense than its liquid form water– ice floats in water

Page 14: Water & Solutions

Universal Solvent• “like dissolves like”• water is able to dissolve ionic compounds and

other polar compounds, but not nonpolar compounds

Page 15: Water & Solutions

Universal Solvent• Solution

– mixture of two or more substances in which the solute molecules are evenly distributed in the solvent

• Solute– substance that is dissolved

• Solvent– substance that does the dissolving

Page 16: Water & Solutions

Ionic vs. Polar vs. Nonpolar• Ionic

– substances made of oppositely charged ions held together by ionic bonds

• Polar– substances with charged ends held together by

covalent bonds• Nonpolar

– substances with no charges held together by covalent bonds

Page 17: Water & Solutions

Water & Ionic SubstancesWhy is water able to dissolve salt?

Page 18: Water & Solutions

Water & Ionic SubstancesSalt is ionic (made of charged particles) and water is polar (has charged ends).

Page 19: Water & Solutions

Water & Polar SubstancesWhy is water able to dissolve sugar?

Page 20: Water & Solutions

Water & Polar SubstancesSugar is polar (has charged ends) and

water is polar (has charged ends).

Page 21: Water & Solutions

Water & Nonpolar Substances

Why does vegetable oil separate from water when they are mixed in the same container?

Page 22: Water & Solutions

Water & Nonpolar Substances

Why does vegetable oil separate from water when they are mixed in the same container?

Vegetable oil is nonpolar (no charged ends), and water is polar (has charged ends).

Page 23: Water & Solutions

Specific Heat• water has a high specific heat

– specific heat – the amount of heat required to raise 1 gram of a substance 1 degree Celsius

• it takes a lot of energy to heat up or cool down water

Page 24: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions• Pure water will ionize in the following

way to create hydrogen, and hydroxide ions.

• because of this, water has a neutral pH

H2O H+ + OH-

water hydrogenion

hydroxideion

Page 25: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions• pH - a system to measure the

concentration of H+ ions in a solution• Acids

– H+ > OH- – pH values < 7

• Bases– H+ < OH- – pH values > 7

• Neutral– H+ = OH- – pH values = 7– pure (distilled) water

Page 26: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions

Page 27: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions• each whole number represents a factor

of 10 on the scale– Ex: A solution with a pH of 5 is 10 times

as many hydrogen ions as one with a pH of 6

– Ex: How much more acidic is a solution with a pH is 2 than one with a pH is 5?• 2 3 = 10 times• 3 4 = 10 times• 4 5 = 10 times• 10x10x10 = 1,000 times more acidic!

Page 28: Water & Solutions

Water & Solutions

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Water & Solutions• Buffers

– Weak acids or bases that prevent sudden changes in pH in living organisms


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