Why dont oil and water mix John Pollard

Why does salt dissolve in water but oil doesn’t?

Well, in a word, chemistry,

but that’s not very satisfying, is it?

Well, the reason salt dissolves and oil does not

comes down to the two big reasons

why anything happens at all:

energetics

and entropy.

Energetics deals primarily

with the attractive forces between things.

When we look at oil or salt in water,

we focus on the forces between particles

on a very, very, very small scale,

the molecular level.

To give you a sense of this scale,

in one glass of water,

there are more molecules

than known stars in the universe.

Now, all of these molecules are in constant motion,

moving, vibrating, and rotating.

What prevents almost all of those molecules

from just flying out of the glass

are the attractive interactions between molecules.

The strength of the interactions

between water, itself, and other substances

is what we mean when we say energetics.

You can think of the water molecules engaging

in a constant dance,

sort of like a square dance

where they constantly and randomly exchange partners.

Put simply, the ability for substances

to interact with water,

balanced with how they disrupt

how water interacts with itself,

plays an important role in explaining

why certain things mix well into water

and others don’t.

Entropy basically describes

the way things and energy can be arranged

based on random motion.

For example, think of the air in a room.

Imagine all the different possible arrangements

in space for the trillions of particles

that make up the air.

Some of those arrangments

might have all the oxygen molecules over here

and all the nitrogen molecules over there,

separated.

But far more of the possible arrangements

have those molecules mixed up with one another.

So, entropy favors mixing.

Energetics deals with attractive forces.

And so, if attractive forces are present,

the probability of some arrangements

can be enhanced,

the ones where things are attracted to each other.

So, it is always the balance of these two things

that determines what happens.

On the molecular level,

water is comprised of water molecules,

made up of two hydrogen atoms and an oxygen atom.

As liquid water, these molecules are engaged

in a constant and random square dance

that is called the hydrogen bonding network.

Entropy favors keeping

the square dance going at all times.

There are always more ways

that all the water molecules can arrange

in a square dance,

as compared to if the water molecules

did a line dance.

So, the square dance constantly goes on.

So, what happens when you put salt in the water?

Well, on the molecular level,

salt is actually made up of two different ions,

chlorine and sodium,

that are organized like a brick wall.

They show up to the dance

as a big group in formation

and sit on the side at first,

shy and a bit reluctant to break apart

into individual ions to join the dance.

But secretly, those shy dancers

just want someone to ask them to join.

So, when a water randomly bumps into one of them

and pulls them into the dance away from their group,

they go.

And once they go into the dance,

they don’t come back out.

And in fact, the addition of the salt ions

adds more possible dance positions

in the square dance,

so it is favored for them to stay dancing with water.

Now, let’s take oil.

With oil, the molecules are sort of interested

in dancing with water,

so entropy favors them joining the dance.

The problem is that oil molecules

are wearing gigantic ballgowns,

and they’re way bigger than water molecules.

So, when an oil molecule gets pulled in,

their size is really disruptive to the dance

and the random exchange of partners

that the waters engage in,

a very important part of the dance.

In addition, they are not great dancers.

The water molecules try to engage

the oil molecules in the dance,

but they just keep bumping into their dresses

and taking up all the room on the dance floor.

There are way more ways the waters can dance

when the oil gets off the floor,

so the waters squeeze out the oil,

pushing it back to the bench with the others.

Pretty soon, when a large number of oils

have been squeezed over to the side,

they band together to commiserate

about how unfair the waters are being

and stick together as a group.

So, it is this combination

of the interactions between molecules

and the configurations available to them

when they’re moving randomly

that dictates whether they mix.

In other words, water and oil don’t mix

because they just don’t make great dance partners.

为什么盐溶于水而油不溶于水?

嗯,总之,化学,

但这不是很令人满意,是吗?

好吧,盐溶解而油不溶解的原因

归结为

发生任何事情的两个主要原因:

能量学

和熵。

能量学主要

处理事物之间的吸引力。

当我们观察水中的油或盐时,

我们

关注的是非常、非常、非常小规模的粒子之间的力,

即分子水平。

为了让您了解这种规模,

在一杯水中

,分子的数量

比宇宙中已知的恒星还要多。

现在,所有这些分子都在不断地运动、

移动、振动和旋转。

阻止几乎所有这些分子

从玻璃中飞出的是

分子之间有吸引力的相互作用。 当我们说能量学时

,水、自身和其他物质之间相互作用的强度

就是我们的意思。

你可以想象水分子

在不停地跳舞,

有点像广场舞

,它们不断地、随机地交换伙伴。

简而言之,物质

与水相互作用的能力

,以及它们如何破坏

水与自身的相互作用,

在解释

为什么某些物质能很好地混合到水中

而其他物质不能很好地混合方面起着重要作用。

熵基本上描述

了基于随机运动排列事物和能量的方式

例如,想想房间里的空气。

想象一下构成空气

的数万亿粒子在太空中所有不同的可能排列方式

其中一些安排

可能会将所有的氧分子

和那里的所有氮分子

分开。

但更多可能的排列方式

是将这些分子相互混合。

因此,熵有利于混合。

能量学处理吸引力。

因此,如果存在吸引力,则可以

提高某些安排的可能性,

即事物相互吸引的安排。

因此,决定发生什么的始终是这两件事的平衡

在分子水平上,

水由水分子组成,

由两个氢原子和一个氧原子组成。

作为液态水,这些分子参与

了一种称为氢键网络的恒定且随机的广场舞

熵有利于

保持广场舞一直进行。

与水分子跳线相比,所有水分子

在广场舞中

的排列方式总是更多。

于是,广场舞不断地进行着。

那么,将盐放入水中会发生什么?

嗯,在分子水平上,

盐实际上是由两种不同的离子组成的,

氯和钠

,它们像砖墙一样排列。

他们以一大群人的形式出现在舞蹈

,起初坐在一边,

害羞,有点不愿意分裂

成单独的离子加入舞蹈。

但暗地里,那些害羞的舞者

只是希望有人邀请他们加入。

因此,当水随机撞到其中一个并将他们

拉离他们的团队时,

他们就会离开。

一旦他们开始跳舞,

他们就不会回来了。

而事实上,盐离子的加入增加

了广场舞中更多可能的舞姿,

所以更喜欢他们留在水中跳舞。

现在,让我们吃油。

有了油,分子有点喜欢

与水共舞,

所以熵有利于他们加入舞蹈。

问题是油

分子穿着巨大的舞会礼服

,它们比水分子大得多。

所以,当一个油分子被拉进来时,

它们的大小真的会破坏舞蹈

和水域参与的伙伴的随机交换

,这

是舞蹈的一个非常重要的部分。

此外,他们不是出色的舞者。

水分子试图

在舞蹈中与油分子结合,

但它们只是不断地撞到他们的衣服

上,占据了舞池的所有空间。

当油离开地板时,水可以通过更多方式跳舞,

因此水会挤出油,

将其与其他人一起推回板凳上。

很快,当大量的

油被挤到一边时,

他们团结起来,

对水域的不公平表示同情,

并团结在一起。

因此,正是

分子之间的相互作用

以及它们随机移动时可用的配置的

这种组合决定了它们是否混合。

换句话说,水和油不能混合,

因为它们不能成为很好的舞伴。