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Review • What is the difference between a compound and an element? – Give an example of each. • What is the difference between a covalent and ionic bond? • What are van der Waals forces? Properties of Water Section 2-2 Water! • • • • • What is the chemical formula for water? How much water covers the Earth? How much of your body is water? Is there water in food? How long could you live without water? • • • • • H2O 75% 60-70% Yes! 3 days Properties of Water • Phases: Solid, Liquid, Gas • Polarity • Hydrogen bonds – Adhesion – Cohesion • Making Mixtures – Solutions – Suspensions • Making Acids and Bases Water Density • Ice is less dense than liquid water • When water freezes air is trapped within the frozen ice making the cube larger and less dense • Benefits: – Fish and plant life can survive in liquid layers of water under ice PHASE CHANGES: the closeness and speed of the compounds Polarity Hydrogen ends become slightly positive • Water is polar • Although the compound is neutral overall there is a shift of charge within the compound The much larger atom, Oxygen, pulls more on the shared eThis end of the compound becomes slightly more negative. Hydrogen Bonding • Due to polarity, water compounds attract to one another • Slightly negative oxygen attracts slightly positive hydrogen from another compound • This attraction among water is COHESION. • Water is also attracted to other materials. This is ADHESION. COHESION Water compounds attract To one anothercauses water to “bead” ADHESION Water compounds attract To glass molecules And form a meniscus The greatest solvent on Earth! • Water’s polarity allows it to break ionic bonds of other compounds…creating free ions. Mixtures Two or more elements physically mixed together but not chemically combined (not bonded) 1. SOLUTIONS- a solute is dissolved into a solvent – Distributes evenly – Ex: Koolaid, salt water 2. SUSPENSIONS- added substance does not dissolve but breaks into small enough pieces that it remains suspended in the water and does not settle out. - Ex: blood RECAP • Why does ice float on a lake? • Explain the polarity of water – how are the charges distributed? • What is the difference between adhesion and cohesion? • Explain the difference between a solution and a suspension Water Dissociation • Water can break apart on its own into 2 charged ions – Hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions Acids and Bases Water can react to form individual ions: H2O H+ + OH- • In pure water this occurs naturally but the amount of H+ is always = to the amount of OH- so water remains neutral pH scale: “the power of Hydrogen” • Some solutions made with water become acidic or basic. This is determined by the amount of H+ (hydrogen ions) in the solution Acids • • • • • pH range from 0 – 6.99 Any compound that forms H+ ions in solution H+ ions > OH- ions The closer to 0 the more acidic the solution Examples: stomach acid, lemon juice Bases (Alkaline) • • • • • pH ranges from 7.01 to 14 Any compound that forms 0H- ions in solution OH- ions > H+ ions The closer to 14 the more basic the solution Examples: lye, bleach, oven cleaner ACID:Any compound that forms H+ ions in solution BASE: Any cmpnd that forms 0H- ions in solution pH and Living Things • pH values in living cells are usually kept between 6.5 and 7.5 – Optimal pH for chemical reactions to take place in the body – Any switch in pH could cause serious/fatal problems Buffers • Weak acids or bases that can react with strong acids or bases • Used to regulate pH and prevent sharp sudden changes in pH • There are natural buffers in your blood that keep the pH at 6.5 to7.5 RECAP • What makes a solution acidic or basic? • How is acidity measured? • A solution with pH 8.5 is considered….