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Bonding and Water Properties General Biology
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A chemical compound consists of atoms of two or more elements Compounds are held together by chemical bonds Chemical Compounds
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Chemical bonds Forces of attraction that hold atoms of a compound together The three types of bonds are: Covalent bonds Ionic bonds Hydrogen bonds Bonding
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Covalent bonds Share electrons between atoms Each atom has a filled outer energy level 2 types of covalent bonds Nonpolar covalent – electrons are shared equally Example: Oxygen gas Polar covalent – electrons are shared unequally and pulled towards one atom making a neg. charge, or pole, at one end of the atom Example: Water Bonding
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Covalent bonds
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Covalent bonds can be nonpolar or polar
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Form between a positive ion and a negative ion Example: Na+ and Cl- bond to create NaCl Ionic Bonds
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Ionic bonding
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Hydrogen bonds Weak bonds between molecules Positively charged hydrogen atom in one covalently bonded molecule is attracted to a negatively charged area of another molecule. Example: Hydrogen bonding between water molecules Hydrogen Bonding
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Hydrogen bonding
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Because of hydrogen bonding, water has some very unique properties. Water
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Fig. 3-2 Hydrogen bond – – H + + H O — — + + + + + + – – – – – –
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Water exists in 3 forms: gas, liquid, or solid Hydrogen bonds are formed or broken as water changes state Water Properties
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Ionic and polar substances dissolve well in water b/c of water’s hydrogen bonds. Water facilitates chemical reactions Hydrophilic substances—interact readily with water, such as table salt Hydrophobic substances—not disrupted or dissolved by water, such as fats Water is an excellent solvent.
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Fig. 3-7 Cl – Na Cl – + + + + + + + + – – – – – – – – Na + – – – +
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Changes temperature very slowly. Must add a lot of energy to heat or remove a lot of energy to cool/freeze water. Water has a high heat capacity
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Less dense as a solid than a liquid… due to hydrogen bonding Ice floats!
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Fig. 3-6a Hydrogen bond Liquid water Hydrogen bonds break and re-form Ice Hydrogen bonds are stable
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Cohesion – attraction between like substances Occurs b/c of hydrogen bonding between water molecules Leads to a high surface tension Creating a water surface that is very firm Example: insects ‘walking’ on water Water has strong cohesion and high surface tension.
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Fig. 3-4
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Attraction of unlike substances Capillary action Water adhering to the narrow tubing or absorbent solids Water has strong adhesion.
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Fig. 3-3 Water-conducting cells Adhesion Cohesion 150 µm Direction of water movement
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http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/ content/propertiesofwater/water.html http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/ content/propertiesofwater/water.html Water Animation
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