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Chemistry: Properties of Water Water, Water Everywhere • If you have ever seen a photograph of Earth from space, you know that much of the planet is covered by water. Water makes life on Earth possible. If life as we know it exists on some other planet, water must be present to support that life. • 1. Working with a partner, make a list of ten things that have water in them. • 2. Exchange your list for the list of another pair of students. Did your lists contain some of the same things? Did anything on the other list surprise you? • 3. Did either list contain any living things? Polarity of Water • Water molecules (H2O) are neutral overall • Polarity: In a water molecule, the oxygen (with 8 protons in its nucleus) has a stronger attraction for electrons than the hydrogen (with 1 proton in its nucleus) = greater chances of finding the shared electrons near the oxygen atom • As a result, the oxygen end of the molecule is slightly more negative (-) and the hydrogen end is slightly positive (+). This is known as a polar molecule. • Polarity is the uneven distribution of electrons. Polarity of Water (continued) • A water molecule is polar because there is an uneven distribution of electrons between the oxygen and hydrogen atoms Oxygen is an “electron-hog” and most of the electrons will hang out near the oxygen. Hydrogen Bonds • Water, because it is polar, can attract other water molecules • One hydrogen atom of one water molecule bonds to the oxygen atom of another water molecule, creating a hydrogen bond (not as strong as ionic or covalent bonds) Cohesion • Attraction between molecules of same substance (water bonds with water) • Example: water to water; explains why drops of water form beads on smooth surfaces Water Moderates Temperature • When water is heated, the water molecules move around faster = break hydrogen bonds and eventually increase temperature • When water is cooled, hydrogen bonds reform, a process that releases heat • Evaporation is a cooling process Adhesion • Attraction between molecules of different substances (water can bond to glass for example) • Example: water to glass molecules; capillary action; graduated cylinder and meniscus Mixtures • Mixture – material composed of two or more elements or compounds that are physically mixed together but are not chemically combined • Example: salt and pepper; sugar and sand, etc. Solutions • NaCl in water creates Na+ and Cl- ions which are attracted to water molecules • Ions become dispersed in water, forming a solution – all components are evenly distributed throughout the solution Solutions (continued) ClCl- Na+ Na+ Water Water Example: In a salt-water solution, table salt is the solute = substance that is dissolved in water. Water is the solvent = substance in which solute dissolves Go to Section: Solutions (continued) ClCl- Na+ Na+ Water Water Example: In a salt-water solution, table salt is the solute = substance that is dissolved in water. Water is the solvent = substance in which solute dissolves Go to Section: Suspensions • Some materials do not dissolve in water, but separate into pieces so small that they don’t settle out. The movement of the water keeps the small particles suspended = suspensions • Example: blood and other undissolved particles remaining in suspension Acids, Bases, and pH • Water molecules can react to form ions as seen below in a chemical equation: H2 O (water) H+ (hydrogen ion) + OH- + (hydroxide ion) The pH Scale • Indicates concentration of H+ in solution • Ranges from 0 to 14 – at pH of 7, concentration of H+ ions and OH- ions is equal = neutral The pH Scale (continued) • Below pH 7 = ACIDIC = more H+ ions than OHions; lower the pH, the more acidic – Any compound that forms H+ ions in solution – Strong acids have a pH between 1 to 3 • Above pH 7 = BASIC = more OH- ions than H+ ions; higher the pH, the more basic – Any compound that produces OH- ions in solution – Strong bases have a pH between 11 to 14 • Each step on the pH scale is a factor of 10 • Example: pH of 4 has 10 times as many H+ ions as a pH of 5 The pH Scale Neutral Increasingly Acidic Both extremes can cause serious side effects from respiratory problems to burned skin. Increasingly Basic Oven cleaner Bleach Ammonia solution Soap Sea water Human blood Pure water Milk Normal rainfall Acid rain Tomato juice Lemon juice Stomach acid Buffers • pH of fluids in the human body is between 6.5 to 7.5. Body must keep pH at these numbers to maintain homeostasis – does this by dissolved compounds called buffers – weak acids or bases that react with strong acids or bases to prevent sharp, sudden changes in pH