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Liquids and Solids

Liquids and Solids. Use the Force Luke!. Learning objectives. Describe origins of surface tension and meniscus Describe different types of cohesive force Identify type of cohesive force based on molecular formula Describe origin of hydrogen bonding Explain unique properties of water

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Liquids and Solids

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  1. Liquids and Solids Use the Force Luke!

  2. Learning objectives • Describe origins of surface tension and meniscus • Describe different types of cohesive force • Identify type of cohesive force based on molecular formula • Describe origin of hydrogen bonding • Explain unique properties of water • Determine concentrations of solutions using the common concentration scales

  3. Liquids and solids exist because of forces • Cohesive forces are attractive forces between molecules of the same substance • Adhesive forces are attractive forces between molecules of different substances

  4. Surface tension results from cohesive forces • Molecules on surface are drawn inwards • Tendency to form sphere • Surface behaves like a shrink-wrap film • Liquids form into spherical drops • Denser objects can “float” on the surface tension

  5. Consequences of surface tension: What will these hands ne’er be clean? • Cleaning requires wetting • Surface tension prevents wetting • Beading on a waxed car • Detergent acts as go-between

  6. Cohesive forces and meniscus • Adhesive forces pull H2O molecules to maximize coverage • Cohesive forces between H2O molecules drag liquid up • Gravity pushes liquid down

  7. Solid: strong interactions • Fixed shape • Not compressible • Rigid • Dense

  8. Solids • Atoms in solids rotate and vibrate but do not translate • Melting occurs when the translational energy of the atoms is sufficient to break free of the lattice • Usually this is a very well defined point • With amorphous solids it can be smeared out – softening of fats

  9. Liquid: medium interactions • Liquid • Not rigid • Assumes shape of container • Not compressible • Dense

  10. Vapour pressure and boiling • Molecules do not all have the same energy • Evaporation: High energy molecules escape the liquid – vapour pressure • When vapour pressure = atmospheric pressure boiling occurs – all liquid becomes gas • Sublimation is direct transition of solid to gas (dry ice)

  11. The Four Forces of the Apocalypse

  12. Dispersion force • Arises from fluctuations in electron clouds in atoms • Only force present in nonpolar molecules • Increases with size of atoms/molecules

  13. Dipole-dipole force • Usually stronger than dispersion forces • Present in polar molecules • Polar substances higher boiling point than nonpolar substances

  14. Polar or nonpolar: that is the question? • Polar molecules must contain polar bonds • Determine bond polarity from electronegativity • The polar bonds must not cancel out • Determine molecular shape • Examples: • O2 nonpolar (no polar bond) • HCl polar (one polar bond) • CHCl3 polar (three polar bonds) • CCl4 nonpolar (four polar bonds but they all cancel)

  15. Hydrogen bonding • The ultimate expression of polarity • Small positive H atom exerts strong attraction on O atom • Other H-bonding molecules: HF, NH3 • H2O is the supreme example: two H atoms and two lone pairs per molecule

  16. Terms in solution • Solute: the dissolved substance • Solvent:the dissolving substance

  17. Molarity • Concentration is usually expressed in terms of molarity: • Moles of solute/liters of solution (M) • Moles of solute = molarity x volume of solution

  18. Example • What is molarity of 50 ml solution containing 2.355 g H2SO4? • Molar mass H2SO4 = 98.1 g/mol • Moles H2SO4 = .0240 mol • Volume of solution = 50/1000 = .050 L • Concentration = moles/volume = .0240/.050 = 0.480 M

  19. Dilution • More dilute solutions are prepared from concentrated ones by addition of solvent M1V1 = M2V2 Molarity of new solution M2 = M1V1/V2 To dilute by factor of ten, increase volume by factor of ten

  20. Trace quantities • Percent means one in a hundred • PPM measures trace amounts – 1 in a million • Iodized salt contains tiny amounts of KI – 7.6 x 10-5 g in 1 g of salt • 7.6 x 10-5 g = 7.6 x 10-2 mg = 76 μg

  21. Milligrams per liter • Units for impurities in drinking water • 0.38 mg lead in 250 mL water • Concentration in mg/L

  22. Something about water • High boiling point compared with similar compounds • Liquid at earth temperature • Solid less dense than liquid • Essential for life on earth • High heat capacity • Modifying influence on climate • Universal solvent

  23. H2O has optimum combination of lone pairs and H atoms

  24. H bonding generates three-dimensional network

  25. Ice floats! • Something so familiar we might believe all solids float on their liquids. Not so. Water is the exception.

  26. Hydrogen bonding and life • hold the two strands of the DNA double helix together • hold polypeptides together in such secondary structures as the alpha helix and the beta conformation • help enzymes bind to their substrate • help antibodies bind to their antigen • help transcription factors bind to each other • help transcription factors bind to DNA

  27. Implications for life on earth • Without H-bonds molecules like DNA would not exist • H-bonds hold the two strands together • Comparative weakness of bonding allows for DNA replication

  28. Unusual variation of the density of water with T: maximum density at 4°C

  29. Effects of density on lakesseasonal cycling of waterreplenishment of oxygen Warm water on top Cold water on top

  30. Water contamination • Biological • Human and animal waste – bacteria leading to hepatitis, cholera, typhoid, dysentery • Chemical • Organic • Benzene • Chlorohydrocarbons • Inorganic • Asbestos • Nitrates • Lead • Mercury • Radioactivity • Uranium • Tritium spills

  31. Legislating cleanliness: The Safe Drinking Water Act 1974 • Establish maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) for 84 contaminants • All water supplies must pass • Periodic sampling required • Too much or too little? Water treatment costs money

  32. Don’t trust the EPA? Treat at home • Active carbon filters • Effective on organic contaminants • Need regular replacement • Water softeners • Specific to hard water • Ion exchange using zeolites • Reverse osmosis • Apply pressure to push water from saline to pure side of membrane

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