Water Flashcards
Why are water molecules polar?
- oxygen has a greater affinity for electrons (more electromagnetic)
- this makes oxygen slightly negative and hydrogen slightly positive
- this creates different charged regions, which makes water polar
What does dipolar mean?
- has two charged regions
What makes water a stable structure?
- the numerous hydrogen bonds despite singular bonds only having a weak attraction/bond.
Why does water have such a high boiling point?
- hydrogen bonds needs to be broken, which uses a lot of energy.
Why is water ‘cohesive’ and what is the biological significance?
- cohesive due to the hydrogen bonds
- significant as it provides surface tensions that can be used for a habitat e.g. pond skaters
- cohesion also allows within a column of water the column doesn’t break when molecules are pulled up
- e.g. this allows xylem in transpiration to pull up water
What is specific heat capacity and what is its biological significance?
- water absorbs/loses a relatively large amount of heat before temperature changes
- stops body temperature fluctuating too much and so enzymes don’t denature
What is latent heat of vaporisation and what is its biological significance?
- water absorbs a large amount of energy before it turns into water vapour
- heat taken to vaporise sweat simultaneously cools you down, which stops enzymes denaturing also
- works in plants too
Why does water act as a solvent for so many solutes? What is the biological significance?
- charges of the hydrogen and oxygen become attracted to the other polar molecules and separates the ions
- allows transport and high % of water increases metabolism
- polar molecules will dissolve in water but non-polar molecules won’t
What are hydrophilic substances?
- substances that dissolve in water as they become part of water’s hydrogen bonded structure
What are hydrophobic substances?
- substances don’t dissolve in water as they can’t become part of water’s hydrogen bonded structure
How does the density of water facilitate life?
- life can be buoyant/float so organisms survive and can preserve energy
- ice has a lesser density than water making it float, so polar bears can hunt for example
- ice insulates the water beneath stopping the temperature fluctuating so aquatic life can survive
Suggest, with reasons which properties of water make it such an important component of blood
- liquid so can transport substances
- acts as polar solvent
- allows chemical reactions
- biological molecules polar
- ions are charged
- relatively resistant to temp change as coolant
Describe ways in which the physical properties of water allow organisms to survive over a range of temperatures
- SHC, body thermally stable, enzymes won’t denature
- latent heat of vaporisation, takes lots of heat to evaporate sweat cooling the body down, so enzymes won’t denature
- ice less dense than water so floats
- ice insulates
- solvent, reactions can happen, transport medium
- cohesion/adhesion, transpiration stream
- surface tension
- transparent, underwater photosynthesis
- high density, buoyant