Unusual properties of water test
Water sticking to other substances
Adhesion
A negative ion
Anion
hydrophobic
Are nonpolar molecules hydrophobic or hydrophilic?
water sticking to water
Cohesion
between nonmetals and nonmetals. electrons are shared. they can be polar ( not equally shared electrons) or nonpolar (equally shared electrons)
Covalent bonds
a substance made of one type of atom and cannot be broken down by chemical reactions
Element
The heat energy being continually added to a pot of water during boiling is used to break the bonds of attraction (hydrogen bonds) between water molecules so that each individual water molecule may change from a liquid to gas state
Explain what the energy is used for that is heating the water at the boiling temperature
hydrogen bonds that hold water molecules together so tightly that the surface acts like a membrane.
High surface tension
Oxygen has eight protons in the nucleus and hydrogen has one. Since oxygen has more protons it is hungry for electrons (high electronegativity) this pull creates the polarity of charges.
How does the size of oxygen's nucleus affect the distribution of electron in the water molecule?
The temperature of the air near big bodies of water is more moderate than air that is not near bodies of water.
How does waters specific heat impact our climate?
one or two hydrogen bonds with other water molecules
How many hydrogen bonds are in water?
water loving substances
Hydrophilic
fearing water
Hydrophobic
A chemical bond resulting from the attraction between oppositely charged ions
Ionic bond
form between metals and nonmetals. the metal gives a electron to become positively charged and the nonmetal takes the electron to become negatively charged.
Ionic bonds
atom or molecule with an electrical charge
Ions
less
Is ice more or less dense than water?
hydrophobic
Is oil hydrophobic or hydrophilic
Higher
Is the specific of water higher or lower compared to other liquids?
No, it dissolves so much of what it comes into contact with.
Is water found pure in nature? why?
Share their electrons equally. Carbon & Hydrogen share electrons equally. No charges in non polar molecule. All molecules made of Carbon and Hydrogen only are non polar.
Nonpolar substance
the process in which plants take carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil and rearranges it using light energy to make the sugar glucose and waste product oxygen gas.
Photosynthesis
6CO2 + 6H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2
Photosynthesis equation
what is formed from a chemical reaction
Product
The starting substances in a chemical reaction
Reactant
A substance that is dissolved in a solution
Solute
A liquid substance capable of dissolving other substances
Solvent
the fact that water is sticky
What are all the properties of water due to?
Anything polar or ionic
What can water dissolve?
Salts
What do all ionic bonds form?
make them attracted to water
What do the electrical charges of polar or ionic substances do?
96% of living matter
What does carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen make up?
table salt
What does ionic bonding form?
the unequal distribution of charges on the water molecule make it a polar molecule.
What does it mean to be a polar molecule?
It connects water molecules making the water sticky and very cohesive.
What does the hydrogen bonding do?
It reduces the temperature fluctuations in living organisms
What does the property of high specific heat reduce?
It means it's takes longer for bodies of water to freeze in the winter, allowing living things more time to adjust to the change.
What does waters high heat of fusion mean?
The ability of water the climb up a narrow tube even against gravity.
What is capillary action?
the amount of heat energy required to change water into gas
What is heat of vaporization?
When water absorbs a large amount of energy to raise its temperature 1 degree on the celsius scale.
What is high specific heat?
100 degrees Celsius
What is the boiling point of water?
slightly positive
What is the charge of hydrogen in H20?
slightly negative
What is the charge of the oxygen in H20?
Changes in density
What is the fifth property of water
H20
What is the formula of water?
0 degrees Celsius
What is the freezing point of water?
The energy that must be removed from a given weight before it freezes
What is the heat of fusion?
4 and it only occurs in solid ice
What is the maximum number of hydrogen bonds that can be made?
two hydrogen atoms
What is the oxygen atom bomded to?
temperature
What is the state of matter dependent on?
covalent bonds
What kind of bond is oxygen bonded to?
In liquid water/solid ice water molecules are held together by hydrogen bonding. This bonding forms between the partially negative oxygen end of H20 and the partially positive end of the second H20 molecule.
What kinds of bonds can form between two adjacent water molecules?
each water molecule is hydrogen bonded to four other molecules.
What type of bonding only happens in solid ice? why?
All living things underwater would die
What would happen if ice didn't float?
because nonpolar molecules that are small can dissolve to an extent like gas and carbon dioxide so that the oxygen gas and carbon dioxide can dissolve into the water
Why can aquatic animals and plants live underwater?
because it can absorb a lot of heat energy without its temperature increasing by much
Why is water a good moderator of temperature?
equal to the number of protons plus neutrons
atomic mass
the number of protons
atomic number
a positive ion
cation
The process in which stores energy in glucose is changed to the chemical energy of ATP. it releases food molecules with the help of oxygen gas.
cellular respiration
C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy
cellular respiration equation
Little energy
does is take little or more energy to evaporate a little bit of water?
different forms of the same element. number of neutrons vary so weights are different.
isotopes (C-11 etc.)
molecule in which opposite ends have opposite electric charges
polar molecule
It has a high specific heat
what do scientists say about water?
high heat capacity
what is the fourth property water
Cohesion and adhesion/ capillary action
what is the second property of water
high surface tension
what is the third property water
Hydration shells (table salt in water) (sodium chloride)
what structures form when water molecules surrounds individual ions?
it is a universal solvent
when is the first property water
in the nucleus
where is the mass of an atom found?