Top Banner
Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things
25

Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Dec 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Gary Kelley
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Water

The Single most abundant compound in most living things

Page 2: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Properties of Water

• Water:– Expands upon freezing– Has adhesion properties (capillary action)– Has cohesion properties due to surface tension– Has a high specific heat– Has a high heat of vaporization– Has a high heat of fusion– Is the greatest solvent on Earth

Page 3: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Expansion upon Freezing• Water is a liquid across most of the earth• Water expands as it freezes (ice is less dense

than liquid water = ice floats on water)• Fish and aquatic life can survive under ice

Page 4: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Polarity

• Oxygen has 8 protons in its nucleus. Hydrogen only has 1 proton in its nucleus. Oxygen has much stronger attraction for electrons than hydrogen

• Greater probability of finding the shared electrons near the oxygen atom than the hydrogen atom (covalent bonding)

Page 5: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

PolarityThus, the oxygen end of the molecule has a partial negative charge while the hydrogen end of the molecule has a partial positive charge.

Page 6: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Hydrogen Bonds

• Because of the partial charges, polar molecules such as water can attract each other

• Hydrogen bonds form between hydrogen atoms of one water molecule and oxygen atoms of another water molecule

Page 7: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Cohesion / Surface Tension

• Cohesion is an attraction between molecules of the same substance.

• Water is extremely cohesive due to H bonding.

Page 8: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Adhesion / Capillary Action

• Adhesion is an attraction between molecules of different substances

• Adhesion is why water is drawn out of the roots of plants and up into its stems and leaves

Meniscus of water occurs because the adhesion between water molecules and glass molecules is stronger than the cohesion between water molecules – called capillary action

Page 9: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

High Specific Heat

• Specific heat means the ability of a substance to raise 1 gram of body mass by 1°C.

• Water has high specific heat because a lot of energy is required to break H bonds

• Important because water buffers organisms' internal temperatures

Page 10: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

High Heat of Vaporization

• Water evaporates only at a high heat.

• It resists evaporating because H bonds must be broken to change states from liquid to gas

• Allows you to cool from sweating

Page 11: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

High Heat of Fusion

• Amount of energy needed to change state from solid to liquid

• Also due to breaking H bonds

• Resists melting. Keeps environment cool

Page 12: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions

• A mixture is composed of two or more elements or compounds that are physically mixed but not chemically combined (salt and pepper)

• Two types of mixtures can be made with water:

• Solutions• Suspensions

Page 13: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Water as a Solvent

• All of the components of a solution are evenly distributed throughout.

• In a salt-water solution, salt is the solute – the substance that is dissolved

• Water is a solvent – the substance in which the solute dissolves.

• Water’s polarity gives it the ability to dissolve ionic compounds and polar molecules.

• Water is the greatest solvent on earth.

Page 14: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions and Suspensions

– When a crystal of table salt is placed in warm water, sodium and chloride ions are attracted to the polar water molecules.

Na+

Na+

Cl -

Cl -

Water Water

Page 15: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions and Suspensions

– Ions break away from the crystal and are surrounded by water molecules.

Cl -

Page 16: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions and Suspensions

– The ions gradually become dispersed in the water, forming a solution.

Page 17: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions and Suspensions

• Suspensions are mixtures of water and nondissolved materials.

• Blood that circulates through your body is composed of suspended cells in a liquid plasma matrix

Page 18: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Acids, Bases, and pH

• A water molecule can react to form hydrogen and hydroxide ions.

• Water is neutral because the number of positive hydrogen ions (H+) produced is equal to the number of negative hydroxide ions (OH-) produced.

• The pH scale indicates the concentration of H+ ions in solution. The pH scale ranges from 0 to 14.

Page 19: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

• At a pH of 7, the concentration of H+

ions and OH- ions is equal.

• Pure water has a pH of 7.

The pH Scale

Human blood

Milk

Sea water

Normal rainfall

Pure water

Page 20: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions with a pH below 7 are called acidic because they have more H+ ions than OH- ions.

The lower the pH, the greater the acidity.

Acid rainTomato juice

Lemon juice

Stomach acids

The pH Scale

Page 21: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Solutions with a pH above 7 are called basic because they have more OH- ions than H+ ions.

The higher the pH, the more basic the solution.

The pH Scale

Soap

Bleach

Oven cleaner

Ammonia solution

Page 22: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Acids

• An acid is any compound which forms H+ ions in solution.

• Acidic pH is below 7, therefore has more H+ ions that pure water

• Examples include: acetic acid (vinegar), gastric juice (stomach acid), sulfuric acid (in car batteries)

Page 23: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Bases

• A base is a compound that produces OH- ions in solution.

• Basic, or alkaline, solutions contain fewer H+ ions that pure water, and have a pH above 7

• Basic examples include: baking soda (sodium bicarbonate), ammonia (NH3), lye (NaOH), milk of magnesia

Page 24: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.
Page 25: Water The Single most abundant compound in most living things.

Buffers

• The pH of fluids within most cells of the human body is kept between 6.5 and 7.5

• If pH is lower or higher if will affect chemical reactions. Therefore, pH balance is an important part of homeostasis.

• Buffers are weak acids of bases that react with strong acids or bases to prevent sudden sharp changes in pH.