Lecture 9: Water For Life: SCCH 100 Integrated Chemistry
Lecture 9: Water For Life: SCCH 100 Integrated Chemistry
Water has never lost its mystery. After at least two and a half
millennia of philosophical and scientific inquiry, the most vital of
the worlds substances remains surrounded by deep uncertainties.
Without too much poetic license, we can reduce these questions to
a single bare essential: What exactly is water?
Philip Ball, in Lifes Matrix: A Biography of Water,
University of California Press,
Berkeley, CA, 2001, p. 115
Lewis structures
Space-filling
On periodic
table, EN
increases
O
H
H2 has a nonpolar
covalent bond.
NaCl
NaCl has an ionic
bond look at the
EN difference.
Na = 1.0
Cl = 2.9
DEN = 1.9
Polarized bonds
allow hydrogen
bonding to occur.
Maximum Density
40 C
Density of Water
Hydrogen Bonding
in Water
The hydrogen-bonded lattice structure of the common form of ice. Notice the open channels
between layers of water molecules.
Water Footprint
Water is necessary to produce food:
Water Footprint
Water is necessary for products:
Substances capable of
dissolving other substances
usually present in the greater
amount.
Substances dissolved in a
solvent usually present in
the lesser amount.
Concentration Terms
Parts per hundred (percent)
9
3
110 g H 2O 110 g H2 O 1 L H 2 O
solute
M = Lmol
of solution
Note you do NOT add
58.5 g NaCl to 1.00 L of
water.
The 58.5 g will take up
some volume, resulting in
slightly more than 1.00 L
of solution and the
molarity would be lower.
Forming ions
Na
Na
Na+ ion
Na atom
Cl
Cl atom
+ 1 e-
+ 1 e-
Cl
Cl- ion
MgO
magnesium oxide
NaBr
sodium bromide
and
Sodium ions
Sulfate ions
magnesium
hydroxide
NH4Br
ammonium
bromide
H2O
Na+(aq) + Cl(aq)
*Insoluble means that the compounds have extremely low solubility in water (less than 0.01 M).
All ionic compounds have at least a very small solubility in water.