1 / 60

2-2 Properties of water

2-2 Properties of water. polarity : a compound’s uneven distribution of electrons. What is polarity?. Polarity acts like magnets. polarity : a compound’s uneven distribution of electrons. The hydrogens are attracted to the oxygens of another molecule.

airlia
Télécharger la présentation

2-2 Properties of water

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. 2-2 Properties of water

  2. polarity: a compound’s uneven distribution of electrons. What is polarity?

  3. Polarity acts like magnets. polarity: a compound’s uneven distribution of electrons.

  4. The hydrogens are attracted to the oxygens of another molecule. polarity: a compound’s uneven distribution of electrons.

  5. What does polarity do? Causes water to expand when it freezes. ice

  6. What are hydrogen bonds? hydrogen bond: a hydrogen of a compound is attracted to another compound’s negative part.

  7. What is cohesion? Water to water What is adhesion? Water to glass (etc.)

  8. What is capillarity? The adhesion, cohesion and (air pressure outside the tube) making water go up against gravity.

  9. Water…just like all matter has a certain amount of molecular motion. At any given moment, ¼ of the molecules are moving ( or pushing) up. Double click on this↓ to see diffusion. http://www.chem.iastate.edu/group/Greenbowe/sections/projectfolder/animations/diffusionV8.html

  10. buoyancy: competition between molecules pushing up and gravity pulling down. What is buoyancy? http://www.nisd.net/secww/science/science-taks/quiz11/fluids%20quiz.htm 8 good questions about buoyancy. Allow pop-ups for answers to be given.

  11. buoyancy: competition between molecules pushing up and gravity pulling down.

  12. viscosity: how thick or thin a liquid is. What is viscosity? The bigger the number the thicker (more viscose it is.)

  13. What is a mixture? Vinegar and baking soda are not a mixture because they react. Vinegar and water are a mixture because they do NOT react.

  14. Magnified salt crystals. What are solutions? A homogeneous mixture

  15. solute: the salt alone solvent: the water alone solution: the salt and water together Cl- Cl- Na+ Na+ Water Water

  16. http://www.chem.iastate.edu/group/Greenbowe/sections/projectfolder/flashfiles/thermochem/solutionSalt.htmlhttp://www.chem.iastate.edu/group/Greenbowe/sections/projectfolder/flashfiles/thermochem/solutionSalt.html Double click on this ↑ to see salt dissolving.

  17. solute: the salt alone solvent: the water alone solution: the salt and water together Cl- Cl- Na+ Na+ Water Water

  18. Salt ions being separated by collisions of water molecules.

  19. suspension: the stuff that will not dissolve, but rather sinks or floats. Blood is partly a suspension. A glass of river water is partly a suspension.

  20. What are some solubility tricks? • Grind large pieces of solute into small pieces, thereby increasing surface area for the water molecules to collide into. • Raise the temperature to increase collisions of H2O’s into solute. • Stir or shake which increases the collisions. surface area: smaller particles have more surface area compared to one large particle.

  21. surface area: smaller particles have more surface area compared to one large particle.

  22. How much solute can dissolve in the solvent? It depends on the conditions and the properties of the solution being made.

  23. What does supersaturated mean? There is so much solute, that there aren’t enough water molecules to surround the solute.

  24. How does temperature affect solubility? Usually, the warmer, the better.

  25. But gases dissolve better at lower temperatures.

  26. How does pressure affect solubility?The more pressure (lid on) the better the dissolving of a gas in a liquid. http://www.nisd.net/secww/science/science-taks/quiz4/solubility_factors_quiz.html Take this 12 question quiz over solubility. Allow pop-ups for answers to be given.

  27. Are all solutions liquids? No

  28. Can electricity go through water? If it has salts…yes. If it has sugars or proteins…no. http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/genobc/animations/electrolyte.mov conduction of electricity: what ions do in water

  29. Which has the greatest solubility? CaCO3 or FeS or HgCl2 or KClO4

  30. Which liquid makes the light shine brighter? A. A dilute solution of water and ammonia B. A dilute solution of water and sulfuric acid

  31. The unique properties of water enable life to exist on Earth. Which of these is a property of pure water? F Its solid form is more dense than its liquid. G It has a low heat absorption capacity. H It is slightly more acidic than air. J It dissolves many substances.

  32. According to the law of conservation of mass, how much zinc was present in the zinc carbonate?

  33. A student pours mineral salts into a bottle of cold water. Which of the following best explains why shaking the bottle will affect the dissolving rate of the salt? A. Shaking exposes the salts to the solvent more quickly. B. Shaking helps more water to evaporate. C. Shaking causes more ions to precipitate out of solution. D. Shaking equalizes the water temperature. http://www.glencoe.com/sec/science/lep_science/physical_science/tutor/quizzes/test15.html Take this 25 question quiz to check your understanding of solubility.

  34. Soda water is a solution of carbon dioxide in water. This solution is composed of a F gaseous solute in a gaseous solvent G liquid solute in a liquid solvent H gaseous solute in a liquid solvent J liquid solute in a gaseous solvent http://www.roomd116.com/Taks%20Assignments/Solutions.pdf Take this 6 question quiz to check your understanding of solubility.

  35. Solid KNO3 was added to each beaker. Each beaker was stirred at the same rate until all of the solid dissolved. The table shows the solubilities of KNO3 at different temperatures. How will the rates of dissolving compare? A. KNO3 will dissolve faster in Beaker B because of increased surface area. B. KNO3 will dissolve faster in Beaker A because the water molecules are farther apart. C. KNO3 will dissolve faster in Beaker B because the overall kinetic energy is increased. D. KNO3 will dissolve at the same rate in Beaker A and Beaker B because the concentrations are the same.

  36. A solution which has a concentration that exceeds its predicted solubility at a certain temperature and pressure would be: A unsaturated. B saturated. C supersaturated. D dilute

  37. What are acids? Water molecules exist in equilibrium with hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions. H2O ↔ H+ + OH- H+ OH-

  38. What are acids? Water molecules exist in equilibrium with hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions. H2O ↔ H+ + OH- or H+ OH-

  39. What are acids? Water molecules exist in equilibrium with hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions. H2O ↔ H+ + OH- Just a proton = H+ OH-

  40. What are acids? Water molecules exist in equilibrium with hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions. H2O ↔ H+ + OH- Hydrogen ions wish they had their electron back. They feel naked without an electron. H+ OH-

  41. These are all acids because the hydrogens all transfer their electron to the other elements, then are left as a solitary proton that would like any electron from any element nearby. HCl H2SO3 HNO2 H3PO2 HNO4 H2SO5 HI

  42. Even though these compounds have hydrogens, none of them are acids because none of the hydrogens “transferred” the electron. They are all sharing electrons and therefore do not feel naked.

  43. Acid: naked hydrogen ions, pH of 0 → 6.9 Base: OH ions searching for another hydrogen, pH of 7.1 → 14

  44. What is the pH scale?

  45. Concentrated acid can be diluted by adding more water.

  46. What are buffers? Weak acids or bases that can react with strong acids or bases to prevent sharp, sudden changes in pH.

  47. pH indicators Litmus paper tells acid or base pH paper tells pH numbers

  48. Approximate the pH of the Water Apples Beans Milk Shrimp

More Related