chapter 3: water and life

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Chapter 3: Water and Life

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Chapter 3: Water and Life. Essential Knowledge. 2.a.3 – Organisms must exchange matter with the environment to grow, reproduce, and maintain organization (3.1-3.3). 7 Properties of Water. 1) Cohesive 2) Adhesive 3) High surface tension 4) Stabilizes temperatures - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Chapter 3: Water and Life

Page 2: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Essential Knowledge

2.a.3 – Organisms must exchange matter with the environment to grow, reproduce, and maintain organization (3.1-3.3).

Page 3: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

7 Properties of Water 1) Cohesive 2) Adhesive 3) High surface tension 4) Stabilizes temperatures 5) High heat of vaporization 6) Expands when frozen 7) Versatile solvent

Page 4: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

1) Liquid Water Is Cohesive Water sticks to water. Why?

• Because the polarity of water results in hydrogen bonding.

Contributes to transport of nutrients (plants)

Page 5: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

2) Liquid Water is Adhesive Water sticks to other molecules. Why?

• Hydrogen bonding. Plants:

• Water adheres to cell walls (helps pull water and nutrients through plant)

Page 6: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Water transport in trees uses Cohesion and Adhesion

Page 7: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

3) Water Has A High Surface Tension

The surface of water is difficult to stretch or break.

Why? Hydrogen bonding. Greater surf tension than most

liquids

Page 8: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

4) Water Stabilizes Temperature Water can absorb and store a huge

amount of heat from the sun. Result - climate moderation Result - organisms are able to

survive temperature changes.

Page 9: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

5) Water Has A High Heat Of Vaporization

Heat of Vaporization: • The quantity of heat a liquid must

absorb for 1g of it to convert to a gaseous state.

Results:• Water cools organisms from excessive

heat buildup.• Why?

Hydrogen bonding

Page 10: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

6) Water Expands When It Freezes

The distance between water molecules INCREASES from the liquid to the solid form.

Result:• Aquatic life can live under ice.

Why?• Hydrogen bonding

Page 11: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Solids and Liquids

Water Benzene

Floats Sinks

Page 12: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Solid Liquid Gas

States of Matter

Page 13: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

7) Water Is A Versatile Solvent Water will form a solution with many

materials. Considered the best solvent Why?

• Hydrogen bonding

Page 14: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Solvent The dissolving agent. The material in the greater quantity. Ex:

• Water• Alcohols• Buffers

Water is the best solvent • Why? Versatile (can dissolve MOST

solutes)

Page 15: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Solute The substance that is dissolved. The material in the lesser quantity. Ex:

• Salt• Sugar• Kool-aid powder

Page 16: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Hydrophilic Materials

Materials that dissolve in water.• Hydro - water• philic - to like or love

Have ionic or polar regions (polar covalent bonds) on their molecules for H+ bonds.

Page 17: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Hydrophobic Materials that repel water. Hydro - water phobic - to fear Have non-polar covalent bonds.

• Remember: In npc bonds, e- are shared evenly.

Ex:• Lipids• Cell membrane components

Page 18: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Quick Review What is cohesion? What is adhesion? Name the main reason that water

possesses the properties that it does. Give an example of each of the

following:• Solute• Solvent

Page 19: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Solution Concentration Usually based on Molarity. Molarity - the number of moles of

solute per liter of solution. Use mass to calculate # of molecules

Page 20: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Moles The molecular weight of a substance

in grams. One Avogadro’s number of

molecules. • 6.02 X 1023 = 1 mole

Page 21: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

One Mole of each

Sulfur

Sugar

Copper Sulfate

Mercury Oxide

Copper

Sodium Chloride

Page 22: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Dissociation of Water Water can sometimes split into two

ions.

In pure water the concentration of each ion is 10-7 M

Page 23: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Dissociation of Water, Continued

Adding certain solutes disrupts the balance between the two ions.

The two ions are very reactive and can drastically affect a cell.

Page 24: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Acids Materials that can release H+ (when

dissolved in water) pH = 0-7 (6.9) Example: HCl HCl H+ + Cl-

Page 25: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Bases Materials that can absorb H+

Often reduce H+ (by producing OH- ) pH = 7.1-14 Example: NaOH, blood (7.4-7.8),

bleach

Page 26: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Neutrals Materials that are neither acids nor

bases. pH = 7 (ish)

• Usually 6.5-7.4 Ex:

• Urine

Page 27: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

pH Scale A logarithmic scale for showing H+

concentration pH = - log [H+]

Page 28: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

pH Scale

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Example:For a neutral solution:[H+] is 10-7

or - log 10-7 or - (-7)or 7

Page 30: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

pH, cont. Acids: pH <7 etc. Bases: pH >7 etc. Each pH unit is a 10x change in H+

[H+] + [OH-] = 14 Therefore, if you know the

concentration of one ion, you can easily calculate the other.

Page 31: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Buffers Materials that have both acid and

base properties. Resist pH shifts. Cells and other biological solutions

often contain buffers

Page 32: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Buffers, cont. Advantage:

• Prevents damage to cell/DNA• pH changes can denature proteins

Ex:• Buffers in blood keep pH around a

slightly basic pH Most are acid-base pairs

Page 33: Chapter 3:  Water and Life

Summary Recognize the chemical structure of water. Relate the structure of water to its properties. Identify and discuss the unique properties of

water. Calculate specific concentrations of solutions

(moles). Recognize pH and the pH scale. Recognize acids, bases, and buffers.