1 / 14

W a t e r

W a t e r. What is Water?. Water is a chemical substance that is essential for all life forms It covers 71% of the Earth’s surface Oceans hold 97% of Earth’s surface water It is the only substance on Earth that is found abundantly in all three states (solid, liquid, gas)

amos
Download Presentation

W a t e r

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. W a t e r

  2. What is Water? • Water is a chemical substance that is essential for all life forms • It covers 71% of the Earth’s surface • Oceans hold 97% of Earth’s surface water • It is the only substance on Earth that is found abundantly in all three states (solid, liquid, gas) • Water molecules are composed of hydrogen and oxygen (H2O). • These molecules are held together by strong hydrogen bonds that allow water molecules to stick to other water molecules and many other compounds

  3. Properties of Water • Water is colourless, odourless and tasteless • Water has an unusually high freezing point for its molecular mass; thus water is a liquid at room temperature, where other similar compounds would be gaseous • Water is known as the universal solvent because it can dissolve large amounts of different kinds of substances. These substances are known as hydrophilic (water-loving).

  4. Properties of Water • Water has the highest surface tension of all liquids • Pure water has its maximum density at 4°C. It becomes less dense as it freezes. • Almost all substances contract when they freeze; however, water expands by 9% when it changes from water to ice.

  5. Properties of Water • Water has a low viscosity, meaning it flows easily • Water is very transparent for a liquid. Only strong UV light is slightly absorbed by water • Increasing pressure raises the boiling point of nearly all solids. Increasing pressure lowers the boiling point of ice

  6. Water and Heat • The change in temperature of a substance when heat is added or removed is called ‘sensible heat’ because it can be measured on a thermometer. • When a substance such as water changes states, heat is added or removed without a change in temperature. • This is called ‘latent heat’.

  7. Specific Heat Capacity • The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1g of a substance by 1˚C • Water has the second highest specific heat capacity of all substances • Water can absorb a huge amount of heat without raising its temperature that much

  8. Heat of Fusion • The amount of heat required to melt 1g of a solid into a liquid • Water has a large heat of fusion; thus it requires a large amount of energy to melt ice • When water absorbs solar energy, some of the energy is used to melt the ice and is not available to increase the temperature of the water

  9. Heat of Vaporization • The amount of energy required to convert 1g of a substance from a liquid to a gas • When water absorbs solar energy, some of the energy is used to evaporate the water and is not available to increase the temperature of the water • Water vapour has a lot of energy

  10. The Hydrologic Cycle • Dominated by the oceans • Shapes the weather and climate • Supports plant growth and makes life possible • A three step process

  11. The Hydrologic Cycle - Accumulation • Precipitation falls on land accumulates in large pools, such as oceans, lakes, and ponds • Some water runs off into surface waters like rivers and streams (surface runoff) • Some water seeps into the soil by infiltration • Water that flows in underground steams in called subsurface runoff • Water from melting snow and ice is called meltwater runoff

  12. The Hydrologic Cycle - Evaporation • Some surface water returns to the air in a gaseous form (water vapour) • Some water evaporates from the pores of plants by transpiration • Solar energy drives the evaporation of water

  13. The Hydrologic Cycle - Condensation • Water vapour cools as it moves upward in the atmosphere • Vapour is converted back to liquid • Droplets form and gather as clouds • Depending on temperature, droplets will either be frozen or liquid • As clouds become oversaturated, water returns to land by precipitation and the cycle continues

More Related