Properties of Water Station Lab
Properties of Water Station Lab
Materials:
1. Predict how many drops you will be able to put on the penny before it overflows by
having each person at your table guess. Write down these guesses below.
Now, let’s see how many drops of water you can place on the surface of the penny
before it overflows. Drop water from the dropper onto the penny, keeping a careful
count of each drop.
2. Below, draw a diagram showing the shape of the water on the penny after one drop,
when the penny is half full and just before it looks like it is going to overflow.
3. How many total drops did you get on the penny? __________________
4. If the number of drops is different from your prediction, explain your results in terms of
cohesion.
5. Now we are going to attempt the same with alcohol. Do you think you will get more or
less drops on the penny?
6. How many total drops did you get on the penny? ___________________
Materials:
Procedure:
With your finger, spread one drop of detergent on the surface of a dry penny.
1. Predict how many drops you think this penny will hold after being smeared with
detergent. ________________
Doing the same as station one, add drops of water to the penny surface. Keep a careful
count of each drop.
2. Below, draw a diagram showing the shape of the water on the penny after one drop,
when the penny is half full and just before it looks like it is going to overflow.
4. How does the detergent affect the water? (Look back at the definition for surface
tension)
5. Explain how detergents act as cleaning agents and how it might be dangerous for the
environment.
Let’s examine the relative heats of vaporization of water and ethanol as follows:
1. Simultaneously stick one cotton swab into a beaker of water while doing the same with a
second cotton swab in a beaker of ethanol
2. Gently draw thin lines of liquid (a few cm long) with each swab on your bench top and record
how long it takes for each line to evaporate.
Time for water:___________ Time for ethanol:__________
Questions:
2. Based on your results explain why water is a much more effective coolant than alcohol
for the body.
Part 2
Water has a high specific heat capacity. Specific heat is a measure of heat capacity, is the heat
required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1°C. Water, with its high heat capacity,
therefore, changes temperature more slowly than other compounds.
Questions:
3. Think about what happens when you boil water for pasta. Which becomes hot first, the
pot or the water in the pot?
Universal Solvent
Because of its high polarity, water is called the universal solvent. A solvent is a substance that
dissolves, or breaks apart, another substance (known as a solute). A general rule that
determines whether a substance will dissolve in a solvent depends upon its polarity. Polar
solvents dissolve polar solutes and nonpolar solvents dissolve nonpolar solutes.
Part 1
To observe how water behaves as a solvent, you will attempt to dissolve a variety of substances
in liquid water. To do so, measure 50 ml of deionized water into each of four 100 ml beakers
and attempt to dissolve each substance by thoroughly stirring or swirling. Record the results in
your lab notebook, noting whether each substance is polar, non-polar or ionic:
Questions:
Density
Water is one of the few substances that are less dense as a solid than as a liquid. While most
substances contract when they solidify, water expands. This property is due to the hydrogen
bonding between water molecules.
Part 1
4. How could this also be a bad thing for an animal that gets caught out in freezing
temperature?
Adhesion
Questions:
1. Record your observations of the celery at this lab station. How does this relate to what
happens when you place a straw in a drink?
3. Answer the following questions using at least one pertinent property of water and
explain your answers.
a. How does water rise from the roots of a tree to the very top?
b. How do insects walk on the water?
d. Why do people become seriously ill, or die, if they go without liquid for a week
or so?
e. How would life in a lake be affected if ice sank and lakes froze from the bottom
up?