Polar Molecules
Hydrophilic sites. These sites are attracted to water molecules due to their polarity and can interact with the surrounding water molecules.
Water molecules are attracted to other water molecules due to hydrogen bonding, as well as to other polar molecules and ions due to their polarity. This attraction is essential for many biological processes and properties of water, such as surface tension and capillary action.
Hydrophobic molecules avoid water. Strictly speaking, they do not attract water, and therefore water will avoid them, since it is more attracted to other molecules or to itself.
Only from the sides and from beneath
Adhesion is when water molecules stick to other molecules
Hydrophilic sites. These sites are attracted to water molecules due to their polarity and can interact with the surrounding water molecules.
The relationship is that they do not mix. The molecules in water are attracted to each other and will not mix with the oil molecules which are also attracted to each other and therefore will not mix with the water molecules
Yes, but they attract polar molecules more strongly."Hydrophobic" molecules is a misnomer. The nonpolar molecules in question are attracted to water molecules (usually more strongly than they're attracted to each other, even), but they get "shoved out of the way" by polar "hydrophilic" molecules which are even more strongly attracted to water molecules.
water molecules.
Water molecules are attracted to other water molecules due to hydrogen bonding, as well as to other polar molecules and ions due to their polarity. This attraction is essential for many biological processes and properties of water, such as surface tension and capillary action.
Polar molecules are hydrophilic, meaning they are attracted to water.
no, that would mean water molecules are not attracted to other water molecules
it is the opposite. Hydrophobic is water hating, hydrophilic is water loving. ie, hydrophobic substances avoid water, hydrophilic are attracted
Water is attracted to a charged balloon because the balloon's electric charge creates an electric field that polarizes the water molecules, causing them to be attracted to the balloon.
Water is hydrophilic, meaning it is attracted to and interacts well with other substances, such as other water molecules or polar molecules.
Oil molecules are nonpolar and hydrophobic, meaning they do not have an affinity for water molecules which are polar. This difference in polarity causes oil and water to be immiscible, leading to the separation between the two substances in vinegar.
Polar molecules with positively charged regions, such as ammonia and alcohols like ethanol, are attracted to water due to hydrogen bonding. Additionally, polar molecules with negatively charged regions, such as acetate ions, are also attracted to water for the same reason.