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name: samie gonzalez date: sep 8 2025 properties of water: amoeba siste…

Question

name: samie gonzalez
date: sep 8 2025
properties of water: amoeba sisters

water has the shape shown below.
label the positive and negative ends of the molecule.
image of water molecule

circle the correct answer.
water is a polar / nonpolar molecule.
the formula for water is ______.
this means there are:
______ hydrogen
______ oxygen

when two water molecules connect, they bond through ______ bonds.
label the bonds below.
image of water molecules with bonds

adhesion:
water molecules stick to other surfaces.
give one example:
image of a plant stem with water

cohesion:
water molecules stick to ______
example: water droplets form one larger droplet.

surface tension:
cohesive properties of water allow the surface to resist breakage.
give one example:

water as a solvent:
water is very good at dissolving substances.
what are two substances that dissolve in water?

freezing water:
circle one:
water expands / contracts when it freezes.
this is typical / not typical of most liquids.
this causes ice to sink / float.

water has a high specific heat:
specific heat is the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of a given substance by a given amount (such as 1 degree).
circle t (true) or f (false)
water resists changes to heat. t or f
water changes temperature rapidly. t or f

evaporative cooling:

Explanation:

Response

To solve the questions related to the properties of water, we analyze each section:

1. Water Molecule Structure and Polarity
  • Polarity: Water is a polar molecule (oxygen is more electronegative, creating partial charges).
  • Formula: \( H_2O \) (2 hydrogen, 1 oxygen atoms).
  • Bond Between Molecules: Hydrogen bonds (due to attraction between partial + of H and partial - of O in adjacent molecules).
2. Adhesion, Cohesion, Surface Tension
  • Adhesion Example: Water sticking to the sides of a glass tube (capillary action) or to plant cell walls.
  • Cohesion Example: Water droplets forming (molecules stick to each other), like raindrops.
  • Surface Tension Example: Insects (e.g., water striders) walking on water, or a needle floating if placed carefully.
3. Water as a Solvent
  • Substances Dissolving in Water: Ionic compounds (e.g., NaCl, table salt) and polar molecules (e.g., sugar, \( C_{12}H_{22}O_{11} \)).
4. Freezing Water
  • Expansion/Contraction: Water expands when it freezes (unlike most liquids which contract).
  • Typical/NOT Typical: Not typical (most liquids contract on freezing).
  • Sink/Float: Ice floats (because expanded ice is less dense than liquid water).
5. High Specific Heat
  • Resists Heat Changes: True (high specific heat means it takes a lot of energy to change temperature).
  • Changes Temperature Rapidly: False (high specific heat means slow temperature change).

Answer:

s to Specific Questions (from the Worksheet):

  • Water is a (polar/nonpolar) molecule: Polar (circled correctly in the image).
  • Formula for water: \( H_2O \) (filled correctly).
  • Hydrogen atoms in \( H_2O \): 2 (filled as "2" in the image).
  • Oxygen atoms in \( H_2O \): 1 (filled as "1" in the image).
  • Bond between water molecules: Hydrogen (filled in the image).
  • Adhesion Example: E.g., water climbing up a paper towel, or capillary action in plants.
  • Cohesion Example: Water droplets merging (as given: "Water droplets form one larger droplet" is correct).
  • Surface Tension Example: E.g., a paperclip floating on water (if placed gently) or water forming beads on a waxed surface.
  • Substances Dissolving in Water: E.g., Salt (NaCl) and Sugar (\( C_{12}H_{22}O_{11} \)).
  • Freezing Behavior:
  • Expands (circle "expands").
  • Not typical (circle "not typical").
  • Floats (circle "float").
  • High Specific Heat:
  • "Water resists changes to heat": T (True, circle T).
  • "Water changes temperature rapidly": F (False, circle F).

For clarity, here’s a summary of key answers:

  • Polarity: Polar
  • Formula: \( H_2O \)
  • Hydrogen: 2, Oxygen: 1
  • Intermolecular Bond: Hydrogen
  • Adhesion Example: Water sticking to a glass tube (capillary action)
  • Cohesion Example: Water droplets merging
  • Surface Tension Example: Water striders on water
  • Solvent Substances: Salt, Sugar
  • Freezing: Expands, Not typical, Floats
  • Specific Heat: T (resists), F (rapid change)