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2.15: Water - Water’s Solvent Properties

  • Page ID
    12672
    • Boundless
    • Boundless
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    Learning Objectives
    • Explain why some molecules do not dissolve in water.

    Water’s Solvent Properties

    Water, which not only dissolves many compounds but also dissolves more substances than any other liquid, is considered the universal solvent. A polar molecule with partially-positive and negative charges, it readily dissolves ions and polar molecules. Water is therefore referred to as a solvent: a substance capable of dissolving other polar molecules and ionic compounds. The charges associated with these molecules form hydrogen bonds with water, surrounding the particle with water molecules. This is referred to as a sphere of hydration, or a hydration shell, and serves to keep the particles separated or dispersed in the water.

    When ionic compounds are added to water, individual ions interact with the polar regions of the water molecules during the dissociation process, disrupting their ionic bonds. Dissociation occurs when atoms or groups of atoms break off from molecules and form ions. Consider table salt (NaCl, or sodium chloride): when NaCl crystals are added to water, the molecules of NaCl dissociate into Na+ and Clions, and spheres of hydration form around the ions. The positively-charged sodium ion is surrounded by the partially-negative charge of the water molecule’s oxygen; the negatively-charged chloride ion is surrounded by the partially-positive charge of the hydrogen in the water molecule.

    image
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Dissociation of NaCl in water: When table salt (NaCl) is mixed in water, spheres of hydration form around the ions.

    Since many biomolecules are either polar or charged, water readily dissolves these hydrophilic compounds. Water is a poor solvent, however, for hydrophobic molecules such as lipids. Nonpolar molecules experience hydrophobic interactions in water: the water changes its hydrogen bonding patterns around the hydrophobic molecules to produce a cage-like structure called a clathrate. This change in the hydrogen-bonding pattern of the water solvent causes the system’s overall entropy to greatly decrease, as the molecules become more ordered than in liquid water. Thermodynamically, such a large decrease in entropy is not spontaneous, and the hydrophobic molecule will not dissolve.

    Key Points

    • Water dissociates salts by separating the cations and anions and forming new interactions between the water and ions.
    • Water dissolves many biomolecules, because they are polar and therefore hydrophilic.

    Key Terms

    • dissociation: The process by which a compound or complex body breaks up into simpler constituents such as atoms or ions, usually reversibly.
    • hydration shell: The term given to a solvation shell (a structure composed of a chemical that acts as a solvent and surrounds a solute species) with a water solvent; also referred to as a hydration sphere.

    This page titled 2.15: Water - Water’s Solvent Properties is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Boundless.

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