Chem4tech Reviewer
Chem4tech Reviewer
Air pressure affects the boiling point of water, which is why it takes
longer to boil an egg at high altitude than at the beach. The higher the
altitude, the lower the air pressure, the lower the boiling point of
water, and thus, the longer time to hard-boil an egg. At sea level water
boils at 212°F (100°C), while at 5,000 feet, water boils at 202.9°F (94.9
°C).
1. ADHESION AND COHESION
Adhesion: Water is attracted to other substances
Cohesion: Water is attracted to water
Water properties that affect every water molecule on Earth and also
the interaction of water molecules with molecules of other substances
Cohesion and adhesion are the "stickiness" that water molecules have
for each other and for other substances
CAPILLARY ACTION
Even if you've never heard of capillary action, it is still important in
your life
Capillary action is important for moving water (and all of the things
that are dissolved in it) around
It is defined as the movement of water within the spaces of a porous
material due to the forces of adhesion, cohesion, and surface tension
Even if you've never heard of capillary action, it is still important in
your life
Capillary action is important for moving water (and all of the things
that are dissolved in it) around
It is defined as the movement of water within the spaces of a porous
material due to the forces of adhesion, cohesion, and surface tension
Capillary action occurs when the adhesion to the walls is stronger than
the cohesive forces between the liquid molecules
The height to which capillary action will take water in a uniform circular
tube is limited by surface tension and, of course, gravity
Not only does water tend to stick together in a drop, it sticks to glass,
cloth, organic tissues, soil, and, luckily, to the fibers in a paper towel
Dip a paper towel into a glass of water and the water will "climb" onto
the paper towel
In fact, it will keep going up the towel until the pull of gravity is too
much for it to overcome
It "magically" climb up the towel, appearing to ignore gravity. You are
seeing capillary action in action, and "climbing up" is about right - the
water molecules climb up the towel and drag other water molecules
along.
Plants and trees couldn't thrive without capillary action
Plants put down roots into the soil which are capable of carrying water
from the soil up into the plant
Water, which contains dissolved nutrients, gets inside the roots and
starts climbing up the plant tissue
Capillary action helps bring water up into the roots. But capillary action
can only "pull" water up a small distance, after which it cannot
overcome gravity.
To get to pull water up to all the branches and leaves, the forces of
adhesion and cohesion go to work in the plant's xylem to move water
to the furthest leaf
Capillary action is also essential for the drainage of constantly
produced tear fluid from the eye
Two tiny-diameter tubes, the lacrimal ducts, are present in the inner
corner of the eyelid; these ducts secrete tears into the eye
Maybe you've used a fountain pen .... or maybe your parents or
grandparents did. The ink moves from a reservoir in the body of the
pen down to the tip and into the paper (which is composed of tiny
paper fibers and air spaces between them), and not just turning into a
blob
Of course, gravity is responsible for the ink moving "downhill" to the
pen tip, but capillary action is needed to keep the ink flowing onto the
paper
WATER MENISCUS
A meniscus is a curve in the surface of a molecular substance (water,
of course) when it touches another material
With water, you can think of it as when water sticks to the inside of a
glass
WHY MENISCUS OCCURS
Adhesion is responsible for a meniscus and this has to do in part with
water's fairly high surface tension. Water molecules are attracted to
the molecules in the wall of the glass beaker
And since water molecules like to stick together, when the molecules
touching the glass cling to it, other water molecules cling to the
molecules touching the glass, forming the meniscus
. They'll travel up the glass as far as water's cohesive forces will allow
them, until gravity prevents them from going further
Cohesion is an intermolecular attraction between like molecules (other
water molecules in this case).
WATER COMPRESSIBILITY
water is essentially incompressible, especially under normal conditions
in industrial applications water can be tremendously compressed and
used to do things like cut through metal
water is essentially incompressible, especially under normal conditions
if you fill a sandwich bag with water and put a straw into it, when you
squeeze the baggie the water won't compress, but rather will shoot out
the straw. If the water compressed, it wouldn't "push back" out of the
straw
incompressibility is a common property of liquids, but water is
especially incompressible
water's lack of compressibility helps to push water out of water hoses
(handy for putting out fires), water guns and in artistic water fountains
pressure is applied to a container full of water and rather than
compress, it comes shooting out of an opening, such as the end of the
hose or the end of a small pipe, as in this fountain
if water was highly compressible, it would be harder to create enough
pressure for water to shoot out of the nearest opening
kids make good use of water's uncompressibility when they play a
game of water-balloon tossing
when you squeeze the balloon too much, the balloon's skin will fail
before the water inside compresses—it will burst in your face long
before the water will compress even an infinitesimal amount
Pressure and Temperature can Affect
Compressibility But, squeeze hard enough and water will compress—
shrink in size and become more dense but not by very much
envision the water a mile deep in the ocean. At that depth, the weight
of the water above, pushing downwards, is about 150 times normal
atmospheric pressure
in industrial applications water can be tremendously compressed and
used to do things like cut through metal (especially if an abrasive
material is added to the water and the water is hot)
water being pushed out at tremendous speed through a tiny hole is
used in industry to cut through everything from metal to ceramics to
plastics and even foods
it is the preferred method when the materials being cut are sensitive to
the high temperatures generated by other methods
it has found applications in a diverse number of industries from mining
to aerospace where it is used for operations such as cutting, shaping,
carving, and reaming
to cut through stone a stream of water must be moving very fast and
producing a tremendous amount of pressure
a pump is used to pressurize water in a container at pressure values up
to 90,000 pounds/square inch (psi) and then shoot it out of the nozzle
at speeds up to 600 mph