properties of water. two types of covalent bonds there are two types of covalent bonds: 1.) polar...

Post on 15-Jan-2016

236 Views

Category:

Documents

1 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Properties of Water

• http://vimeo.com/37064053

Two Types of Covalent Bonds

There are two types of covalent bonds:1.) polar covalent2.) non-polar covalent bonds

What is the difference?

1.) Water is a polar molecule and has a very unique structure

Polar covalent bonds = the unequal sharing of electrons

Polar covalent bonds have a region of slight positive charge and a region of slight negative charge.

**Atoms in polar covalent bonds share electrons unequally

Hydrogen bonds• Opposite charges of polar molecules can

interact to form hydrogen bonds.

• A hydrogen bond is an attraction between a slightly positive and a slightly negative atom, (often oxygen)

Non-Polar Covalent Bonds

• Atoms in non-polar covalent bonds share their electrons evenly

2.) Water is the universal solvent

• Solute = a substance that dissolves in a solvent

• Solvent = the substance that dissolves another substance (solute)

• Solution = a mixture of substances that is the same throughout – (it is homogeneous)

SALT

WATER

SALT WATER

Practice

Ice tea

• Which is the solute??• Which is the solvent?

Answers

Ice Tea

Water is the solvent Tea and sugar are the solutes (what is being dissolved)

3.) Water has the properties of adhesion and cohesion

• Cohesion- the attraction between molecules of the same substance– Water is attracted to other molecules because of polar

properties (hydrogen bonding!)– Water molecules are clinging to each other

• As a result of cohesion:– We have Surface tension = water is pulled together creating

the smallest surface possible

• Examples of cohesion: tear drop, rain drop, drop of water coming from the faucet

3.) Water has the properties of adhesion and cohesion

• Adhesion- attraction of molecules of different substances Water molecules stick to other things

How do plants get water absorbed in their roots to the rest of the plant?

4.) Water is important for capillary action

• Because of water’s adhesive and cohesive properties water can be transported from the roots to the top of the plant = capillary action

• How can you explain this…

• Think water in a straw… water moves through plants in a similar way

• Water is attracted to the walls of the tube, and the water molecules are attracted to each other

5.) Water is less dense as a solid than a liquid

• Why??– Why can ice (water’s solid form) float on liquid

water?

ICE LIQUID

• This is because the hydrogen bonds are stable in ice – each molecule of water is bound to four of its neighbors– When water is frozen, the hydrogen bonds keep

molecules at “arms length” far enough a part to make ice just dense enough to float on the liquid surface

– Solid – Water molecules are bonded together – space between is fixed (not changing)

– Liquid – Water molecules are constantly breaking, bonding and re-bonding – space is always changing

6.) Water has a strong surface tension

• The cohesive property of water (water molecules attracting to other water molecules) gives it a high surface tension– Surface tension – the stickiness of water molecules of

the surface of water– Due to the attraction of water molecules to each other

• Enables a paper clip to float, small insects on water, etc.

5 properties of water

1.) Water is a polar molecule 2.) Water is the universal solvent 3.) Water has the properties of adhesion and cohesion4.) Water is less dense as a solid than a liquid5.) Water is important for capillary action6.) Water has strong surface tension

Concept Map• Create a concept map. Include ALL of the following

terms in your concept map. Provide examples, draw pictures, include ANYTHING that will help you to make connections and remember the material!– Polar - solution -surface tension– Solute -solvent -properties of water– Molecule - adhesion -covalent bonds– Hydrogen bond - cohesion -nonpolar – Hydrogen atom - capillary action– Oxygen atom - dense– Electrons -solid– Universal solvent -liquid

top related