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Published byImogen Houston Modified over 9 years ago
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Water is the most abundant inorganic compound in the human body – 66%! It is the transport/exchange medium in organisms (e.g. plasma, cytoplasm)
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Properties of Water
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1. Water is a polar molecule will dissolve other polar molecules (hydrophilic: water-loving) therefore, water is called the “universal” solvent solutes can be gases (e.g. O 2 and CO 2 ), liquids, or solids (e.g. proteins, sugars) But… water cannot dissolve non-polar molecules (these are called hydrophobic: water-hating)
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2. High specific heat capacity absorbs/releases large amounts of heat helps maintain constant body temperature
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3. High specific heat of vaporization good evaporative coolant sweating, panting cools the organism
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4. Density Density of solid water (ice) allows it to float - anomaly! Water is most dense at 4⁰C Evolution - life on this planet began in the ocean because organisms could survive under the ice
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5. Cohesion cohesive attraction to itself hydrogen bonds high surface tension e. g. water droplets, water striders
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Surface tension…
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6. Adhesion adhesive attraction to other polar molecules hydrogen bonds, dipole-dipole capillary action e. g. movement of water up the stem of a plant
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Cohesion vs. Adhesion
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7. Ionization its ability to separate (or dissociate)
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A hydrogen atom moves from one water molecule to another water molecule Actually, a proton (H + ) leaves and the electron is left behind! H + then gets picked up by H 2 O H 3 O + hydronium So, water can dissociate into a hydroxide ion (OH - ) and a hydronium ion (H 3 O + or H + or proton ) Pure water has an equal concentration of H + and OH - Adding substances, however, may change these concentrations
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“Water is life's matrix, mother and medium. There is no life without water.” Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, Hungarian Biochemist 1937 Nobel Prize for Medicine
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