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Properties of Water
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Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Jan 01, 2016

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Julius Hoover
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Page 1: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Properties of Water

Page 2: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

The Unique Properties of Water• Water is a very unusual substance• It has many properties that differ from those

of most other familiar substances• It is H20, meaning every water molecule has 1

atom of Oxygen and 2 atoms of Hydrogen

Page 3: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Specific Heat• Compared to other substances, water requires a

lot of heat to increase its temperature (Think of a hot sandy beach,

but cool ocean water)

• Specific heat: the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of a certain substance by 1 degree Celsius

• Water has a high specific heat

Page 4: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Polar• Water is a polar molecule• A polar molecule is a molecule that

has electrically charged areasHydrogen +Oxygen – • The positive hydrogen ends of one water

molecule attract the negative oxygen ends of nearby water molecules. As a result, the water molecules tend to stick together

Page 6: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Solution vs. Solvent

• Solution – a mixture that forms when one substance dissolves another

• Solvent – the substance that does the dissolving

– In most cases, the solvent is water –AKA: Universal Solvent

Page 7: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Universal Solvent

• Water is called the “universal solvent” because it dissolves almost anything!

• The charged ends of the polar water molecule attract the molecules of other polar substances

Page 8: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Cohesion vs. Adhesion

Cohesion - The tendency of watermolecules to form weak bonds and stick together

Adhesion - The tendency of water to stick to other substances (besides itself)

Water molecules stick to the inside of a cup

Page 9: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Surface Tension

Page 10: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Surface Tension

• The Basilisk lizard makes use of the high surface tension of water to accomplish the incredible feat of walking on water's surface.

• It can't actually walk on water; rather, it runs on water, moving its feet before they break through the surface. Take a look:

Miracle Lizard

Page 11: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Capillary Action

• Capillary action: the combined force of attraction among water molecules and with the molecules of surrounding materials

* caused by adhesion• Allows water to stick to the inside of a straw,

move through materials with pores, and cling to fibers of materials like cloth and paper

Page 12: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

BuoyancyBuoyancy – the ability to float (this is how boats float!)

–Water and other fluids exert an upward force called the buoyant force that acts on a submerged object

Buoyant Force – acts in the direction opposite to the force of gravity, so it makes an object feel lighter

- an object will sink if its weight is greater than the buoyant force

Page 13: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Hydrophobic vs. Hydrophilic

Hydrophobic – molecules that are repelled by water-literally means “fear of water”-usually non-polar, so they are

not attracted to water’s charges-example: oils

Hydrophilic - molecules that are attracted to water- literally means “water loving”-typically polar molecules that are charged-example: salt or anything that dissolves in water

Page 14: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Amphipathic Molecule

• Amphipathic Molecule - a molecule that contains both polar and nonpolar regions

–Very important in the human body

Page 15: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Changing of States

• Water is the only substance on Earth that commonly exists in all of these different states

Page 16: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Density of Water D= m/v

In water's liquid form, hydrogen bonding pulls water molecules together. As a result, liquid water has a relatively compact, dense structure. Liquid Water and Hydrogen Bonding

• As water freezes into ice, the molecules become frozen in place and begin to arrange themselves in a rigid lattice structure

Ice and Hydrogen Bonding

Page 17: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

• The solid ice crystal actually has large holes in it.

• There are fewer molecules in a given volume of ice than in liquid water!

• In other words, ice is less dense than liquid water and will float on the surface of the liquid!

HOW CRAZY IS THAT!?!

Page 18: Properties of Water. The Unique Properties of Water Water is a very unusual substance It has many properties that differ from those of most other familiar.

Lattice Structure of Ice Water Check out how the bonding is different for the solid and the liquids…

FYI…The normal pattern for most compounds is that as the temperature of the liquid increases, the density decreases as the molecules spread out from each other. As the temperature decreases, the density increases as the molecules become more closely packed. This pattern does not hold true for ice as the exact opposite occurs.