Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
The Properties of Water
primarily due to polarity
2
Water Most abundant naturally occurring liquid
Liquid at most Earth temperatures, and the most common compound in living things Unlike most liquids – it expands when frozen The lower density of ice allows it to float (4°C most dense)
3
Water H2O As we know - water is neutral
But because the O atom is larger than the H atoms – electrons spend more of their time nearer the oxygen This gives water a slight overall charge That charge is called polarity
4
Polar Bonding Polarity allows bonding hydrogen bonds; very weak
They last for fractions of a second Continuously break and reform Polarity really does allow bonding They are hydrogen bonds and they are very weak They last for fractions of a second Continuously break and reform
5
Forces due to polarity Cohesion Adhesion
an attraction between molecules of the same substance. Creates surface tension in water Adhesion an attraction between molecules of two different substances
6
The natural attraction of a water molecule to other water molecules
is called cohesion
7
Cohesion Can be seen as water droplets form
8
The attraction of a water molecule to another polar molecule is adhesion
Molecules such as soil and clay (dust) Surfaces like glass or paper straws Certain clothing fibers and … animal hair
9
Adhesion Can be seen as water droplets form on the spider web (another polar surface)
10
Two simple properties associated
with polarity are Capillary Action Surface Tension
11
Capillary Action We know that gravity is ALWAYS pulling on objects with mass Yet water can move up a paper towel with relative ease - How can this happen? Because the positive and negative charges in the paper attract the polar water molecules (adhesion) This property of adhesion is called capillary action
13
Surface Tension Inside a drop of water polar water molecules attract to each other in a random fashion At the surface of the drop, water does not attract to the air A unified layer of molecules at the surface creates surface tension There the water behaves like an flexible sheet allowing denser objects to “sit” on the surface
14
Surface Tension
15
Heat capacity Water has a great ability to absorb heat energy
It can also retain heat energy Ex, areas near large bodies of water maintain more stable climate
16
surface tension capillary action
Review Polarity hydrogen bonding cohesion adhesion surface tension capillary action Heat capacity Forces Forces Properties
17
Terms to Know polarity hydrogen bond cohesion adhesion surface tension
capillary action heat capacity
18
The End polarity
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.