1 / 16

Warm Up: Agree/ Disagree

Warm Up: Agree/ Disagree. T/F: All living things are 70-90% water T/F: Ice water is more dense than liquid water, which is why ice floats. T/F: Water can go against gravity. T/F: Water can become an acid.

opal
Télécharger la présentation

Warm Up: Agree/ Disagree

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Warm Up: Agree/ Disagree • T/F: All living things are 70-90% water • T/F: Ice water is more dense than liquid water, which is why ice floats. • T/F: Water can go against gravity. • T/F: Water can become an acid. • T/F: Water contracts (shrinks) when it freezes which is why cans of soda burst in the freezer. 1

  2. QW: Agree/ Disagree • T/F: All living things are 70-90% water • T/F: Ice water is more dense than liquid water, which is why ice floats (less) • T/F: Water can go against gravity (trees) • T/F: Water can become an acid (acid rain) • T/F: Water contracts (shrinks) when it freezes which is why cans of soda burst in the freezer. (expands) 2

  3. Chapter 2: The Chemistry of Life • 2-2: Properties of Water • BIOLOGY 3

  4. Vocabulary • Cohesion • Adhesion • Mixture • Solution • Solute • Solvent • Suspension • pH Scale • Acid • Base • Buffer 4

  5. “The Blue Planet” 5

  6. The Water Molecule • Polarity: unequal sharing of electrons by H and O atoms • O atom has more electrons than H atom • Water molecule has bent shape with O atom at one end and H atoms at other end 6

  7. Hydrogen Bonds • The partial negative and positive charges (polarity) of water molecules make them attracted to each other • H bonds are not as strong as covalent or ionic bonds • Water can form multiple H bonds 7

  8. HYDROGEN BONDING • Cohesion: water molecules are attracted to each other by H bonds • Ex: water strider glides on top of water 8

  9. Adhesion • Adhesion: water molecules attracting to another substance (like glass) by H bonds • Ex:H2O sticks to side plant vessels • Ex: meniscus in graduated cylinder 9

  10. Mixtures • Mixture: material made of 2 or more elements or compounds mixed together • Solution: mixture in which one or more substance mixed in another • Solute: substance that is dissolved (Na+Cl-) • Solvent: substance in which the solute dissolves Salt dissolving in water 10

  11. Suspensions • Suspensions: mixtures of water and nondissolved particles • Ex: blood 11

  12. Formation of Acids & Bases • A water molecule can react to form ions as in this reaction: • The number of positive ions is equal to negative, so water is neutral H2O H+ + OH- water hydrogen ion + hydroxide ion Banff 12

  13. The pH Scale • pH scale: system to measure concentration of H+ ions in a solution • Ranges from 0 to 14 • pH 7 = neutral • Ex: water • Each step on pH scale represents a factor of 10 • Ex: pH 4 has 10 x as many H+ ions as pH 5 13

  14. Acids • Acid: any compound that forms H+ ions in a solution • Contains a higher concentration of H+ ions than pure water • pH values below 7 • Ex: hydrochloric acid produced by the stomach • Ex: lemons 14

  15. Bases • Base: compound that produces hydroxide ions (OH-) in solution • Contain lower concentrations of H+ ions than pure water • pH values above 7 • Ex: bleach 15

  16. Buffer • Buffers: weak acids or bases that can react with strong acids or bases to prevent sudden changes in pH • Helps maintain homeostasis in our bodies • Ex: carbonic acid in our blood • Ex: TUMS for stomach acid 16

More Related