The oxygen atom of the water molecule is more electronegative than the hydrogen atom (i.e., it attracts more the electrons). As a result, the side of the molecule with the oxygen atom has a partial negative charge. A molecule with such a charge difference is called a dipole.
The dipole moment of the water molecule is shown in the drawing below:
Figure 1: Water molecule with dipole This dipole moment causes water molecules to be attracted to each other (the slightly positive hydrogen side being attracted to the slightly negative oxygen side) and to other polar molecules. This attraction is named hydrogen bonding, and explains several of the water properties.
Figure 2: Hydrogen Bonding - Schematic representation The water molecule dipole and the resulting hydrogen bonding explains several of the water properties such as water high melting and boiling point temperatures that are due to the energy required to break the hydrogen bonding, the fact that ice has a lower density than liquid water, the high surface tension, heat of vaporization and viscosity of water and, to some extent, the ability of water to dissolve many substances.
Water is an excellent solvent for salts because these are made of negatively and positively charged ions that will be surrounded by the dipolar water molecules.
Figure 3: Salt dissolved by water molecules Water is also a good solvent for neutral organic molecules and establishes hydrogen bonding with many molecules involved in the life processes such as glucose, proteins, nucleic acids….
Because water is an excellent solvent, ultrapure water is easily contaminated.
In a classical experience, ultrapure water with a resistivity of 18.2 MΩ•cm @ 25°C was left in a beaker and the evolution of its resistivity measured over time. The results are shown in FIG4 and demonstrate the rapid contamination of water by carbon dioxide from the air, leading to the production of HCO3- in the water and the resulting decrease of resistivity from 18.2 MΩ•cm @ 25°C to 4 MΩ•cm @ 25°C in about one hour.
Figure 4: Demonstration of ultrapure water easy and fast contamination What is true for CO
2 is also true for other chemical substances that may be present in the air of a laboratory such as acid fumes (from nitric acid or chlorhydric acid) and volatile solvents (such as toluene, acetone or tetrahydrofuran).
Ultrapure water is also easily contaminated by materials extracted from containers such as sodium and silica from glass, plasticizers and ions from polymeric materials (for instance, phthalate esters from PVC pipes, fluoride from PTFE pipes) and metallic ions from metallic containers.
This is the reason why, in order to minimize the risks of contamination and the experimental variability that can be caused by these contaminants, ultrapure water should be produced just before usage and used at once for glassware final rinsing or the preparation of solutions.