Title: Chapter 5: The Water We Drink
1 Chapter 5 The Water We Drink
- Water, water, every where, And all the boards did
shrinkWater, water, every where, Nor any drop
to drink. - And every tongue, through utter drought, Was
withered at the root We could not speak, no more
than if, We had been choked with soot. The Rime
of the Ancient Mariner -Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- - We shall not finally defeat AIDS, tuberculosis,
malaria, or any of the other infectious diseases
that plague the developing world until we have
also won the battle for safe drinking-water,
sanitation and basic health care. -Kofi Annan-
Preface International Decade for Action Water
for Life 20052015 An advocacy guide
2 Chapter 5 The Water We Drink
3- Bottled Water Quiz
- True or False?
- 1. Bottled water is healthier than tap water.
- 2. Bottled water is safer than tap water.
- 3. Bottled water is convenient and portable.
- 4. Most plastic water bottles are recycled.
- 5. The market for bottled water is growing.
- 6. The UN is addressing water issues in the
developing world. - 7. Some bottled water is more expensive than
gasoline. - My purchase of bottled water is unrelated to
safer drinking water for the whole world. - http//www.prcweb.org/DOCS/waterbrochureFINALPARTN
ERS.doc
4- 1. False. There is often no difference. Little is
known about the health risks of water stored in
disposable plastic (PET) bottles or the effect of
additives over long periods at high
temperatures. - 2. False. The US EPA sets more stringent
standards for tap water than the FDA does for
bottled beverages. Roughly 40 of bottled water
is actually tap water. - 3. True. But using a refillable bottle is just as
convenient and less expensive. - 4. False. According to the Container Recycling
Institute, only 14 of PET bottles are recycled.
The rest end up in landfills or as litter.
Millions of barrels of oil are required each year
to produce and transport them.
5- 5. True. The Beverage Marketing Corporation
states that Americans spent more than 9 billion
on bottled water in 2004 and that the products
rate of growth was almost 10 per year for the
previous 10 years. - 6. True. The UN adopted a resolution in 2003
calling this the Decade for Water. The
Millennium Development Goals also have an
objective to halve the number of people who lack
reliable and safe drinking water by 2015. - 7. True. Often selling for up to 2.50 a liter
(which translates to 10 a gallon), bottled water
is more expensive than gasoline. - 8. False. The UN estimates that if the world took
half of what it now spends on bottled water (100
billion per year) and invested it in water
infrastructure and treatment, everyone in the
world could have access to clean drinking water.
6 Chapter 5 The Water We Drink
- Forum Says Governments Must Improve Tap Water,
- Bottling companies declare it a non-issue
- Clean Water as a Human right
- 6000 people a day die because of poor water
quality - UN committee on water-
- Bottled water more valuable than crude oil
7 Chapter 5 The Water We Drink
- World wide concerns Quality of water
- Sanitation
- contamination
- natural contaminants
- Privatization of water service
- Pay Actual Costs
- Clean water projects for developing nations
helps eliminate poverty and hunger
www.globalwater.org/
85.3
9Where Does Potable (fit for consumption)
Drinking Water Come From?
Surface water from lakes, rivers,
reservoirs Ground water pumped from wells
drilled into underground aquifers
5.2
10What we need to know to talk about water
- Where we find water
- Physical properties of water
- What Solutions are
- How we measure concentrations of solutions
- Ionic compounds
- Covalent compounds
- the difference between polar and non polar
compounds
11 Chapter 5 The Water We Drink
- Definitions
- Aquifers Pools of water trapped in sand and
gravel 50-500 ft below the surface
Hans Hillewaert (Lycaon)
- Ground water Water pumped from aquifers
12 Chapter 5 The Water We Drink
- Definitions
- Surface water Lakes rivers and reservoirs
National Park service
Sansculotte
13Classifying Matter
All Matter
NO
Can it be separated by a physical process?
YES
Pure Substances
Mixtures
NO
YES
YES
NO
Can it be broken down into simpler ones by
chemical means?
Homogeneous at the macroscopic level
Elements
Heterogeneous Mixtures
Compounds
Solutions
1.6
14A solution is a homogeneous mixture of uniform
composition. Solutions are made up of solvents
and solutes.
Substances capable of dissolving other
substances- usually present in the greater amount
Substances dissolved in a solvent- usually
present in the lesser amount
When water is the solvent, you have an aqueous
solution.
5.3
15How pure is your water
16 Concentration Terms
Parts per hundred (percent) Parts per million
(ppm) mg/L Parts per billion (ppb)mg/L
20 g of NaCl in 80 g of water is a 20 NaCl
solution
5.4
17Molarity M moles solute
liter of solution
concentration of
1.0 M NaCl solution NaCl 1.0 M 1.0 mol
NaCl/L solution Also this solution is 1.0 M in
Na and 1.0 M in Cl- Na 1.0 M and Cl-
1.0 M
5.4
18What is the concentration (in M and mass ) of
the resulting solution when you add 5 grams of
NaOH to 95 mL of water?
95 mL H2O 95 g H2O 5 g NaOH/100 g
solution 95 mL H2O .095 L 5 NaOH 1.3 M
solution of NaOH
5.4
19What is the molarity of glucose (C6H12O6) in a
solution containing 126 mg glucose per 100.0 mL
solution?
6.99 x 10-3 M
5.4
20How to prepare a 1.00 M NaCl solution
mol solute
M
L of solution
Note- you do NOT add 58.5 g NaCl to 1.00 L of
water. The 58.5 g will take up some volume,
resulting in slightly more than 1.00 L of
solution- and the molarity would be lower.
5.4
21Different Representations of Water
Lewis structures
Space-filling
Charge- density
Region of partial negative charge
Regions of partial positive charge
Charge-density
5.5
22Electronegativity is a measure of an atoms
attraction for the electrons it shares in a
covalent bond
EN Values assigned by Linus Pauling, winner of
TWO Nobel Prizes
On periodic table, EN increases
5.5
23A difference in the electronegativities of the
atoms in a bond creates a polar bond.
O
H
H
A polar covalent bond is a covalent bond in which
the electrons are not equally shared, but rather
displaced toward the more electronegative atom.
Partial charges result from bond polarization
5.5
24H2 has a non-polar covalent bond.
Water molecule is polar due to polar covalent
bonds and the shape of the molecule.
NaCl
NaCl has an ionic bond-look at the EN
difference. Na 1.0 Cl 2.9 DEN 1.9
5.5
25Polarized bonds allow hydrogen bonding to occur.
A hydrogen bond is an electrostatic attraction
between an atom bearing a partial positive charge
in one molecule and an atom bearing a partial
negative charge in a neighboring molecule. The H
atom must be bonded to an O, N, or F
atom. Hydrogen bonds typically are only about
one-tenth as strong as the covalent bonds that
connect atoms together within molecules.
Hbonds are intermolecular bonds. Covalent
bonds are intramolecular bonds.
5.6
26When ions (charged particles) are in aqueous
solutions, the solutions are able to conduct
electricity.
- Pure distilled water (non-conducting)
- Sugar dissolved in water (non-conducting) a
nonelectrolyte - NaCl dissolved in water (conducting) an
electrolyte
5.7
27Substances that will dissociate in solution are
called electrolytes.
Ions are simply charged particles-atoms or groups
of atoms. They may be positively charged
cations, Or negatively charged- anions.
Dissolution of NaCl in Water
The polar water molecules stabilize the ions as
they break apart (dissociate).
5.8
28Ions that are themselves made up of more than one
atom or element are called polyatomic ions.
NaSO4 (sodium sulfate) dissociates in water to
form
The sulfate group stays together in solution.
Na
and
Sodium ions
Sulfate ions
5.7
29Simple generalizations about ionic compounds
allow us to predict their water solubility.
5.7
30Maximum Contaminant Level Goal (MCGL) and
Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL)
5.10
31Hard water contains high concentrations of
dissolved calcium and magnesium ions. Soft water
contains few of these dissolved ions.
A pipe with hard-water scale build up
5.12
32Because calcium ions, Ca2, are generally the
largest contributors to hard water, hardness is
usually expressed in parts per million of calcium
carbonate (CaCO3) by mass. It specifies the mass
of solid CaCO3 that could be formed from the Ca2
in solution, provided sufficient CO32- ions were
also present Ca2(aq) CO32(aq) ?
CaCO3(s) A hardness of 10 ppm indicates that
10 mg of CaCO3 could be formed from the Ca2 ions
present in 1 L of water.
5.7
33Access to safe drinking water varies widely
across the world
5.14
34Two water purification techniques
Reverse osmosis
Distillation
5.14