Title: Chapter 5: The water we drink
1Chapter 5 The water we drink
Chem 100 Lecture 9 February
22, 2005
2Reaction of Na and Cl
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r.php?mid55
3Covalent bonding
- In covalent bonds, the electrons are shared.
4Polyatomic Ions
- Polyatomic ions are ions made up of more than one
atom or element. - The atoms making up the ion are covalently
bonded, but the ion itself is involved in the
ionic bond - Example Sulfate, SO4
- 6 4x(6) 2 32
- S O charge octet
-
rule -
satisfied
5Some Common Polyatomic Ions
Another polyatomic ion chlorate, ClO3-
6- EXAMPLES OF FORMULAS FOR IONIC COMPOUNDS
CONTAINING POLYATOMIC IONS - Compound containing K and ClO3- KClO3
- Compound containing Ca2 and ClO3- Ca(ClO3)2
- Compound containing Ca2 and PO43- Ca3(PO4)2
- NAMING IONIC COMPOUNDS THAT CONTAIN A POLYATOMIC
ION - The names of ionic compounds that contain a
polyatomic ion are obtained using the following
pattern name name of metal name of
polyatomic ion - Examples KClO3 is named potassium chlorate
- Ca(ClO3)2 is named calcium chlorate Ca3(PO4)2 is
named calcium phosphate CaHPO4 is named calcium
hydrogen phosphate.
7Most ionic compounds are soluble in water
- Why?
- Because to be soluble, the attractive forces
between the solvent and the ions must be greater
than the attractive forces of the ionic bonds
8Water solutions of ionic compounds
- Recall that water molecules are polar
- The partial negatively charged O is attracted to
the cations and the partially positively charged
H is attracted to the anions
Dissolution of NaCl animation
9- Reaction for dissolution of NaCl in water
- NaCl (s) H2O(l) ? Na(aq) Cl-(aq)
- When compounds containing polyatomic ions
dissolve in water, the polyatomic ions remain
intact. Example - Na2SO4(s) H2O(l) ? 2Na(aq) SO42-(aq)
10(No Transcript)
11Sucrose dissolves, but it doesnt conduct
electricitywhy?
- It doesnt form ions
- Sucrose C12H22O11
- There are no atoms at the extreme ends of the
periodic table (not likely to form ions) - This molecule consists solely of COVALENT BONDS
12Why does sucrose dissolve at all?
- There must be strong forces between the H2O
molecules and the sucrose - Sucrose has many OH groups these can form
Hydrogen bonds with H2O molecules.
The attraction between sucrose and many H2Os will
be greater than between sucrose molecules
13Solubility of covalent compounds
- Not usually as soluble as ionic compounds
- Covalent compounds that do dissolve well are
those with the ability to hydrogen bond with
water - Examples
Sucrose (sugar)
Antifreeze
14Simple solubility rule
- In general, Like dissolves like
- Polar compounds dissolve polar compounds
- But polar and nonpolar compounds do not dissolve
in each other - Oil and water dont mix!
15Why isnt oil soluble?
- Oil is made up of hydrocarbons
- There is only a small electronegativity
difference H 2.1 C 2.5 Difference 0.4 - Bonds are not very polar at all
- Because it is effectively non-polar, it does not
dissolve in water
16Protecting drinking water
- Maximum Contaminant Level Goal (MCLG) The level
at which a person weighing 70 kg (154 lb) could
drink 2 L of water containing the contaminant
every day for 70 years with no ill effect - Not a legal limit
- All known carcinogens have an MCLG of 0
- Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL)
- The legal concentration limit allowed for a
contaminant
17Table of MCLGs and MCL
18How is drinking water treated?
You want to remove bacteria, organic matter,
suspended solids, etc.
19Screening
http//www.chemistry.wustl.edu/edudev/LabTutorial
s/Water/PublicWaterSupply/PublicWaterSupply.html
20Sedimentation
21Coagulation
The water is then filtered and disinfected
22Disinfection
- Disinfectants kill bacteria that can cause
disease in humans - Cryptosporidium, Giardia, fecal colifrom
- Chlorine most common disinfectant in U.S.
- Taste, odor
- Chlorination has the potential to form
undesirable by-products - Trihalomethanes (THMs) such as Chloroform,
(CHCl3) - Ozone More powerful disinfectant than chlorine
so less is needed - More expensive
- Decomposes quickly
- Also forms byproducts
23Hard water
- Hard water is water that contains certain ions
from dissolved minerals - Ca2 , Mg2 , CO32- , HCO3-, SO42-
- Soft water contains few of these ions
- Measure of hardness is ppm CaCO3
- This is NOT to say that a sample actually
contains this amount of solid CaCO3 - Rather, this specifies the amount of CaCO3 that
could be formed from the Ca2 provided there is
also enough CO32- present. - Ca2 (aq) CO32- (aq) ? CaCO3 (s)
- Why is hardness measured this way? Ca2 is
largest contributor
24Source
- Source of hard water is limestone rock
- Composed of CaCO3 and MgCO3
- When water flows over limestone, these minerals
dissolve - In US, water hardness varies from nearly 0 ppm to
over 400 ppm in Midwest
25How soap works
- Because of polar end, soap dissolves in water
- Greases, oil, and dirt are nonpolar, so are not
soluble in water
- Dirt, grease etc. will dissolve in the non-polar
part of of the soap ion. Many soap ions surround
the dirt particle, with their polar ends facing
water. - The negatively charged grease molecule can now
be dissolved in water.
animation
26Soap and hard water
Ca2 , Mg2 , etc ions form ionic compounds with
soap that are less soluble than the ionic
compound containing Na
- Consequences of this lower solubility
- It precipitates out of solution (soap scum!)
- More soap is required to get the same amount of
cleaning power
27What to do about hard water
- Soften it! (Remove the Ca2 and Mg2)
- How?
- Add Na2CO3
- Ion exchange column
28Na2CO3
- Na2CO3 (s)?2 Na (aq) CO32- (aq)
- Ca2 (aq) CO32- (aq) ? CaCO3 (s)
- The CaCO3 is an insoluble mineral that can be
rinsed away.
292) Ion exchange
- Typically contains zeolite claylike mineral
made up of Al, Si, O - Surface is negatively charged
- Normally balanced by Na ions
-- Ions with greater charge will be more
strongly bound to the zeolite surface, and will
replace the Na ions
30Regeneration of ion exchangers
- Eventually the zeolite gets full of Ca2, Mg2,
ions. - Can add salt (NaCl) to regenerate the zeolite
back so it is bonded to Na ions instead
31Desalination
- Desalination- A broad term describing any process
that removes ions from salty water - Ways to desalinate water
- Distillation
- Reverse osmosis
32Distillation
- DistillationA liquid is evaporated and then
condensed - Based on the fact that as the water vaporizes, it
leaves behind most of the dissolved impurities - Passes through a condenser where it cools and
reverts back to a liquidimpurity free! - Distilled water is produced by this process
33Energy involved in distillation
- Remember that water has a high boiling point and
high specific heat - This means that it requires a large amount of
energy to get the liquid into the gas phase. - This process will only be cost effective for
countries with abundant and cheap energy
34Osmosis
- Osmosis The natural tendency for a solvent to
move through a membrane from a region of higher
solvent concentration to a region of lower
solvent concentration. - animation
35Reverse Osmosis
- Reverse osmosis
- Can reverse this process if you provide enough
pressure to the salt water side