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  • How come some insects are able to walk

  • on the surface of a pond,

  • but you quickly sink to the bottom

  • when you try to walk on water?

  • And why do lakes freeze from the top down in winter?

  • In a word, the answer to all these questions is polarity.

  • Water is a simple molecule

  • made up of one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms,

  • but it is essential to life.

  • In fact, water makes up approximately 60%

  • of the adult human being's body weight.

  • The polarity within those water molecules

  • gives this common substance the properties

  • that make it unique and life-sustaining.

  • Polarity refers to the unequal sharing

  • of electrons within a molecule.

  • For water, the bonding between the oxygen atom

  • and two hydrogen atoms within a single water molecule

  • is like a tug-of-war between a big, strong football player

  • and a cute little toddler.

  • Oxygen is a larger atom,

  • with more protons in its nucleus than hydrogen.

  • These positive charges are like a person's physical strength.

  • They're able to attract

  • the negatively charged electrons in the bond,

  • just like a strong individual is able to overpower

  • a weaker individual in a tug of war.

  • So, oxygen is able to attract

  • more than its fair share of electrons.

  • Because hydrogen is smaller and has less strength,

  • or fewer protons,

  • it loses the tug of war

  • and attracts fewer than its fair share of electrons.

  • So, the oxygen in water behaves as though it's negative,

  • and the hydrogens behave as though they're positive.

  • The bonds within a single water molecule

  • are called polar covalent bonds.

  • Covalent means that the electrons are shared.

  • But, as we just learned,

  • polar means that these electrons are not shared equally.

  • In water, the oxygen acts negative

  • and the hydrogens act positive.

  • Since negative and positive attract,

  • that oxygen is attracted to the hydrogen atoms

  • in neighboring water molecules.

  • A special type of bond forms between water molecules,

  • known as a hydrogen bond.

  • Hydrogen bonds don't just happen in water either.

  • They can form between a water molecule

  • and different substances that are polar or ionic.

  • Water's ability to stick to itself is called cohesion,

  • while water's ability to stick to other substances

  • is called adhesion.

  • Now, think back to the initial questions.

  • First, why are some insects able to walk on water?

  • Surface tension due to hydrogen bonding

  • creates a thin film on the surface of water

  • that gives enough resistance

  • for super-light insects to walk on.

  • You can't walk on it

  • because the hydrogen bonds aren't strong enough

  • to hold you up.

  • Why does ice float on top of liquid water?

  • For most other substances,

  • the solid state is more dense than the liquid state,

  • but that is not the case for water!

  • Hydrogen bonds keep water molecules

  • farther apart in frozen water than in liquid water.

  • The farther apart the molecules are,

  • the less dense that solid is.

  • So ice is about 9% less dense than water,

  • which means it floats on the top.

  • That's why lakes freeze from the top down

  • and aquatic life is able to survive

  • through a cold winter every year.

  • It is the polarity of the water molecule

  • and the resulting hydrogen bonding

  • that account for water's unique properties.

  • So, the reason that water is so special,

  • from inside your cells

  • to the world's oceans,

  • is simply because it is a polar molecule.

How come some insects are able to walk

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B1 中級

TED-Ed】極性が水を奇妙な振る舞いにする方法 - クリスティーナ・クラインバーグ (【TED-Ed】How polarity makes water behave strangely - Christina Kleinberg)

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    wikiHuang に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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