The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
To all those participating in this thread, a note on forum etiquette:
There have been several accusations of trolling or labeling someone with a dissenting opinion as a "troll."
I can vouch for the veracity (from past history and/or correspondence with) of every participant in this thread.
There are no trolls to this point on this thread.
Remember that name calling is not appropriate on the TB forum. That is something we have grown to expect on many other so called science forums, but not here.
The guideline is to attack the idea not the person presenting the idea.
If you have presented your case and your opponent does not get it or will not concede the validity of your position, well then your logic is there for all to see. Readers can make their own judgments.
Sometimes when an impasse is reached the best course is to respectfully agree to disagree.
There have been several accusations of trolling or labeling someone with a dissenting opinion as a "troll."
I can vouch for the veracity (from past history and/or correspondence with) of every participant in this thread.
There are no trolls to this point on this thread.
Remember that name calling is not appropriate on the TB forum. That is something we have grown to expect on many other so called science forums, but not here.
The guideline is to attack the idea not the person presenting the idea.
If you have presented your case and your opponent does not get it or will not concede the validity of your position, well then your logic is there for all to see. Readers can make their own judgments.
Sometimes when an impasse is reached the best course is to respectfully agree to disagree.
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
Aardwolf wrote:fosborn_ wrote:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004JGRD..109.4309SThem pesky water vapors acting all gaseous!Abstract
Permeation of various gases through elastomeric O-ring seals can have important effects on the integrity of atmospheric air samples collected in flasks and measured some time later. Depending on the materials and geometry of flasks and valves and on partial pressure differences between sample and surrounding air, the concentrations of different components of air can be significantly altered during storage. The influence of permeation is discussed for O2/N2, Ar/N2, CO2, δ13C in CO2, and water vapor.Results of sample storage tests for various flask and valve types and different storage conditions are presented and are compared with theoretical calculations. Effects of permeation can be reduced by maintaining short storage times and small partial pressure differences and by using a new valve design that buffers exchange of gases with surrounding air or by using less permeable materials (such as Kel-F) as sealing material. General awareness of possible permeation effects helps to achieve more reliable measurements of atmospheric composition with flask sampling techniques.
\Adrwolfwrote...Yet again another paper that has no relevance. Why this has anything to do with the behaviour or the form of water in the air, who knows. In response, I don't see specifically why the water needs to be gaseous to pass the seal.The material is porous but I cant find any specifications down to what scale. Also, neither the glass nor the rubber surface can be manufactured down to flatness at the angstrom level, so it's likely sizeable droplets of liquid water could easily pass between them.
Thinking about it, viscosity of a liquid compared to gas, comes to mind And the context of the paper is gas seals. And water vapor is an issue with gas seals in this paper, so vary relevant to this topic.
Your doubt is on the machining, is your assumptions. Clearly the machining isn't the issue, it s the seals concerning the useful shelf life of the samples. MY experienced with machine seals in hazardous locations is In environments where hydrogen sulfide gas eats electrical components , I have pulled machine covers, years after installation, with no corrosion at all. I have also worked on equipment at a same location with little protection and the electrical components falling apart form the same atmospheric environment. Also these work in explosive environments too. Vary critical. My life has depended on it on occasion.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
the one that heralds new discoveries,
is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'
Isaac Asimov
the one that heralds new discoveries,
is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'
Isaac Asimov
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
`
At a gross macro scale, if you blow gently on small mound of fine talcum powder it doesn’t fly up in chunks; rather it seems to lift off as individual particles and disperse evenly with the breeze. Perhaps it’s an irrelevant example there, but I don’t think, on an atomic level, that gravity is much of an issue;
and with water, “covalent” bonding is not always the dominant force.
Just suppose however, that the surface H2O molecules are not ‘bumped off’ by collisions or Brownian motion of the air; but that the warming, irregularly-shaped water molecules are instead snagged and pulled off by the very much larger relative charges of the oxygen and nitrogen molecules, one or two at a time. We know there is no such thing as an absolutely smooth surface. Not above absolute zero anyway...
Evaporation removes heat, so to further speculate, perhaps with the fluxation of temperature gradients just above the liquid water surface, that groupings of two to ~five airborne molecules may play musical phase-change chairs. Not until enough heat has been dissipated and the molecules have formed one of the water-hexamer groupings (posted earlier) are the formations ‘geometrically’ stable and large enough to persist and to grow, as nano-droplets.
One might also look at the ablation of ice. We don’t see a haze of ice crystals or ‘fog’ lifting off an ice cube in that process, although some vapor may be seen condensing from the humid air around it.
∞
Well science doesn’t yet have the means to observe the process directly, so we are both deep within the realm of conjecture here, but the above description somehow just doesn’t seem the most efficient option.“” Aardwolf wrote:
Well I see no reason why if 1 molecule leaves, 2 or 4 or 6 couldn’t leave together whatever your mechanism. If fact I think it would be likely to be more because a single molecule needs to break 100% of its covalent bonds, while fighting gravity, whereas say a group of say 50 molecules would only be breaking about 50% of their covalent bonds. The larger the group the less bonds need to be broken therefore less energy is required to do it. And if there’s one thing I know for absolute certainty, nature doesn’t waste energy.
‘'
At a gross macro scale, if you blow gently on small mound of fine talcum powder it doesn’t fly up in chunks; rather it seems to lift off as individual particles and disperse evenly with the breeze. Perhaps it’s an irrelevant example there, but I don’t think, on an atomic level, that gravity is much of an issue;
and with water, “covalent” bonding is not always the dominant force.
Just suppose however, that the surface H2O molecules are not ‘bumped off’ by collisions or Brownian motion of the air; but that the warming, irregularly-shaped water molecules are instead snagged and pulled off by the very much larger relative charges of the oxygen and nitrogen molecules, one or two at a time. We know there is no such thing as an absolutely smooth surface. Not above absolute zero anyway...
Evaporation removes heat, so to further speculate, perhaps with the fluxation of temperature gradients just above the liquid water surface, that groupings of two to ~five airborne molecules may play musical phase-change chairs. Not until enough heat has been dissipated and the molecules have formed one of the water-hexamer groupings (posted earlier) are the formations ‘geometrically’ stable and large enough to persist and to grow, as nano-droplets.
One might also look at the ablation of ice. We don’t see a haze of ice crystals or ‘fog’ lifting off an ice cube in that process, although some vapor may be seen condensing from the humid air around it.
∞
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
Well you are free to assume the glass and rubber is machined down to angstrom flatness and I'll assume it's not. I don't know how such a thing is even possible. How would they know if they succeeded? However, you are free to assume they achieve such serendipitous perfection. You are also free to assume that gas goes through the rubber but cannot escape at the seal if that's what you need to keep your point relevant.fosborn_ wrote:Aardwolf wrote:fosborn_ wrote:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004JGRD..109.4309SThem pesky water vapors acting all gaseous!Abstract
Permeation of various gases through elastomeric O-ring seals can have important effects on the integrity of atmospheric air samples collected in flasks and measured some time later. Depending on the materials and geometry of flasks and valves and on partial pressure differences between sample and surrounding air, the concentrations of different components of air can be significantly altered during storage. The influence of permeation is discussed for O2/N2, Ar/N2, CO2, δ13C in CO2, and water vapor.Results of sample storage tests for various flask and valve types and different storage conditions are presented and are compared with theoretical calculations. Effects of permeation can be reduced by maintaining short storage times and small partial pressure differences and by using a new valve design that buffers exchange of gases with surrounding air or by using less permeable materials (such as Kel-F) as sealing material. General awareness of possible permeation effects helps to achieve more reliable measurements of atmospheric composition with flask sampling techniques.\Adrwolfwrote...Yet again another paper that has no relevance. Why this has anything to do with the behaviour or the form of water in the air, who knows. In response, I don't see specifically why the water needs to be gaseous to pass the seal.The material is porous but I cant find any specifications down to what scale. Also, neither the glass nor the rubber surface can be manufactured down to flatness at the angstrom level, so it's likely sizeable droplets of liquid water could easily pass between them.
Thinking about it, viscosity of a liquid compared to gas, comes to mind And the context of the paper is gas seals. And water vapor is an issue with gas seals in this paper, so vary relevant to this topic.
Your doubt is on the machining, is your assumptions.
Having a seal for a specific purpose that works and stating that seals are perfectly flat are very different things. However, I'm not sure if you are talking about metal welded seals here which is also very different to putting a stopper with an o-ring in a test tube.fosborn_ wrote:Clearly the machining isn't the issue, it s the seals concerning the useful shelf life of the samples. MY experienced with machine seals in hazardous locations is In environments where hydrogen sulfide gas eats electrical components , I have pulled machine covers, years after installation, with no corrosion at all. I have also worked on equipment at a same location with little protection and the electrical components falling apart form the same atmospheric environment. Also these work in explosive environments too. Vary critical. My life has depended on it on occasion.
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
As you say I don't think the analogy is relevant. Talcum powder has no molecular bonding so not really a test of the phenomena and also the particles are far too large where gravity is dominant.seasmith wrote:`
Well science doesn’t yet have the means to observe the process directly, so we are both deep within the realm of conjecture here, but the above description somehow just doesn’t seem the most efficient option.“” Aardwolf wrote:
Well I see no reason why if 1 molecule leaves, 2 or 4 or 6 couldn’t leave together whatever your mechanism. If fact I think it would be likely to be more because a single molecule needs to break 100% of its covalent bonds, while fighting gravity, whereas say a group of say 50 molecules would only be breaking about 50% of their covalent bonds. The larger the group the less bonds need to be broken therefore less energy is required to do it. And if there’s one thing I know for absolute certainty, nature doesn’t waste energy.
‘'
At a gross macro scale, if you blow gently on small mound of fine talcum powder it doesn’t fly up in chunks; rather it seems to lift off as individual particles and disperse evenly with the breeze. Perhaps it’s an irrelevant example there, but I don’t think, on an atomic level, that gravity is much of an issue;
and with water, “covalent” bonding is not always the dominant force.
And yes I agree there are other forces but I would assume they are in similar effect on molecular and liquid water so should have no effect on the overall behaviour. Covalent bonding however is very different between the 2 states as I have indicated, and in that point alone more energy is required to separate. Which is also demonstrated by Feynman's experiment. The stronger the electric field the smaller the resulting particles.
Yes, I was going to point out that at the surface of any water in a pool etc. is not perfectly flat. What we see on the surface of a churning ocean is probably similar to what we would see at the sub-micro level of a pool. Either way the interaction needs to be stronger than gravity and it needs to be maintained. Air just doesn't have the energy to maintain the suspension of water droplets.seasmith wrote:Just suppose however, that the surface H2O molecules are not ‘bumped off’ by collisions or Brownian motion of the air; but that the warming, irregularly-shaped water molecules are instead snagged and pulled off by the very much larger relative charges of the oxygen and nitrogen molecules, one or two at a time.
Fosborn may disagree. He assumes o-ring seals and test tubes are perfect.seasmith wrote:We know there is no such thing as an absolutely smooth surface. Not above absolute zero anyway...
We can't see particles evaporating off liquid water, I don't see why ice isn't the same. I find it even less likely a single molecule could escape ice.seasmith wrote:One might also look at the ablation of ice. We don’t see a haze of ice crystals or ‘fog’ lifting off an ice cube in that process, although some vapor may be seen condensing from the humid air around it.
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
Aardwolf wrote:As you say I don't think the analogy is relevant. Talcum powder has no molecular bonding so not really a test of the phenomena and also the particles are far too large where gravity is dominant.seasmith wrote:`
Well science doesn’t yet have the means to observe the process directly, so we are both deep within the realm of conjecture here, but the above description somehow just doesn’t seem the most efficient option.“” Aardwolf wrote:
Well I see no reason why if 1 molecule leaves, 2 or 4 or 6 couldn’t leave together whatever your mechanism. If fact I think it would be likely to be more because a single molecule needs to break 100% of its covalent bonds, while fighting gravity, whereas say a group of say 50 molecules would only be breaking about 50% of their covalent bonds. The larger the group the less bonds need to be broken therefore less energy is required to do it. And if there’s one thing I know for absolute certainty, nature doesn’t waste energy.
‘'
At a gross macro scale, if you blow gently on small mound of fine talcum powder it doesn’t fly up in chunks; rather it seems to lift off as individual particles and disperse evenly with the breeze. Perhaps it’s an irrelevant example there, but I don’t think, on an atomic level, that gravity is much of an issue;
and with water, “covalent” bonding is not always the dominant force.
And yes I agree there are other forces but I would assume they are in similar effect on molecular and liquid water so should have no effect on the overall behaviour. Covalent bonding however is very different between the 2 states as I have indicated, and in that point alone more energy is required to separate. Which is also demonstrated by Feynman's experiment. The stronger the electric field the smaller the resulting particles.
Yes, I was going to point out that at the surface of any water in a pool etc. is not perfectly flat. What we see on the surface of a churning ocean is probably similar to what we would see at the sub-micro level of a pool. Either way the interaction needs to be stronger than gravity and it needs to be maintained. Air just doesn't have the energy to maintain the suspension of water droplets.seasmith wrote:Just suppose however, that the surface H2O molecules are not ‘bumped off’ by collisions or Brownian motion of the air; but that the warming, irregularly-shaped water molecules are instead snagged and pulled off by the very much larger relative charges of the oxygen and nitrogen molecules, one or two at a time.
The point of that Macro-Scale similitude with a fine powder was to recall the general mechanics of Dispersion.
Re the comment on "covalent" bonding, do you understand the mechanics of 'hydrogen bonding' ?
Re the Feynman lectures, he was a truly brilliant instructor and mathematician, but still a shill for the then emerging QED / Particle model; and he wrote those college lectures before satellites even began to probe the ionospheres and higher atmospheres. Some caution should probably be exercised before swollowing his ramblings on weather.
I've noticed looking over this thread that, like McGinn, you seem to just gloss over a lot of stuff that doesn't fit your chosen narrative.
cheers,
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
H2O molecules can only be pulled off the surface of liquid water in clusters. Any attempt to pull them off individually or even in smaller clusters of 2 to 5 H2O molecules will be defeated by the fact that the breaking of H bonds activates polarity in associated H2O molecules.Aardwolf wrote: And yes I agree there are other forces but I would assume they are in similar effect on molecular and liquid water
The same mechanism underlies the high surface tension observed on the surface of liquid H2O, as explained here:
viewtopic.php?f=10&t=16329&p=122435&hil ... on#p122435
To gain a more comprehensive understanding of the counterintuitive dynamics assocated with H2O hydrogen bonding and polarity neutralization I suggest reading and studying this:
http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpB ... 10&t=16798
Here is a different link if you want a printable copy:
Hydrogen Bonds Neutralize H2O Polarity
https://zenodo.org/record/37224
Intuitively Feynman sensed that meteorology's understanding of storms was pseudoscience. But he had no alternative that I am aware of. And he lacked any of kind of sophisticated understanding of hydrogen bonding, without which he had no chance to make much progress in understanding storms.
James McGinn / Solving Tornadoes
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
But my whole point is that at the macro scale gravity is predominant and we're talking about a smaller scale where electromagnetic effects are predominant.seasmith wrote:The point of that Macro-Scale similitude with a fine powder was to recall the general mechanics of Dispersion.
Actually, I should have referred to hydrogen bonding in my previous post (although not entirely convinced of the differences...). Apologies if there was any confusion although it doesn't change my point about the energy requirements.seasmith wrote:Re the comment on "covalent" bonding, do you understand the mechanics of 'hydrogen bonding' ?
I wasn't referring to anything about Feynman's theories on weather. I only was pointing out the experiment, that can be performed by anyone, demonstrating the effect of electric fields on a water jet.seasmith wrote:Re the Feynman lectures, he was a truly brilliant instructor and mathematician, but still a shill for the then emerging QED / Particle model; and he wrote those college lectures before satellites even began to probe the ionospheres and higher atmospheres. Some caution should probably be exercised before swollowing his ramblings on weather.
It might be more helpful if you specify exactly what you are talking about. As far as I am concerned I've addressed all the points/questions aimed at me. I'm pretty sure I haven't received the same consideration.seasmith wrote:I've noticed looking over this thread that, like McGinn, you seem to just gloss over a lot of stuff that doesn't fit your chosen narrative.
cheers,
I'm out
What exactly have I "glossed" over?
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
Right. Pretty simple concept. <moderator edit>Aardwolf wrote:But my whole point is that at the macro scale gravity is predominant and we're talking about a smaller scale where electromagnetic effects are predominant.seasmith wrote: The point of that Macro-Scale similitude with a fine powder was to recall the general mechanics of Dispersion.
Do you think you do understand the mechanics of 'hydrogen bonding'? <moderator edit>seasmith wrote: Re the comment on "covalent" bonding, do you understand the mechanics of 'hydrogen bonding' ?
Hydrogen bonding is incredibly confusing. The huge amount of cognitive dissonance that it generates opens the door to unscrupulous academics who placate the public by providing them with simple models that create the illusion that it is much simpler than it actually is. One consequence of this misrepresentation of hydrogen bonding is that many theoretical problems in many factions of science are irresolvable and will remain irresolvable until these academics are forced to admit that they really don't understand what they have been pretending to understand. <moderator edit>Actually, I should have referred to hydrogen bonding in my previous post (although not entirely convinced of the differences...). Apologies if there was any confusion although it doesn't change my point about the energy requirements.
Feynman said very little about weather. He just pointed out that one of its fundamental assumptions was oversimplified. And it turns out he was right.seasmith wrote: Re the Feynman lectures, he was a truly brilliant instructor and mathematician, but still a shill for the then emerging QED / Particle model; and he wrote those college lectures before satellites even began to probe the ionospheres and higher atmospheres. Some caution should probably be exercised before swollowing his ramblings on weather.
<moderator edit>I wasn't referring to anything about Feynman's theories on weather. I only was pointing out the experiment, that can be performed by anyone, demonstrating the effect of electric fields on a water jet.It might be more helpful if you specify exactly what you are talking about. As far as I am concerned I've addressed all the points/questions aimed at me. I'm pretty sure I haven't received the same consideration.seasmith wrote: I've noticed looking over this thread that, like McGinn, you seem to just gloss over a lot of stuff that doesn't fit your chosen narrative.
cheers,
I'm out
You didn't gloss over anything--and that is why Seasmith is upset.What exactly have I "glossed" over?
James McGinn / Solving Tornadoes
Conservation of Energy (Section Five of Five)
http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpB ... 82#p117064
Last edited by nick c on Sat Dec 23, 2017 6:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: personal insults removed
Reason: personal insults removed
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
~
Sorry, didn't mean to short-circuit the thread.
Merry Christmas
~
Sorry, didn't mean to short-circuit the thread.
Merry Christmas
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
Postby jimmcginn »
H2O molecules can only be pulled off the surface of liquid water in clusters. Any attempt to pull them off individually or even in smaller clusters of 2 to 5 H2O molecules will be defeated by the fact that the breaking of H bonds activates polarity in associated H2O molecules.
It must be emphasized that no stable clustered unit or arrangement has ever been isolated or identified in pure bulk liquid water. A 2006 report suggests that a simple tetrahedral arrangement is the only long-range structure that persists at time scales of a picosecond or beyond.
http://www.chem1.com/acad/sci/aboutwater.html
Wow! this is really sinking in..by seasmith » Well science doesn’t yet have the means to observe the process directly, so we are both deep within the realm of conjecture here,
http://www.chem1.com/acad/sci/aboutwater.htmlA variety of techniques including infrared absorption, neutron scattering, and nuclear magnetic resonance have been used to probe the microscopic structure of water. The information garnered from these experiments and from theoretical calculations has led to the development of around twenty "models" that attempt to explain the structure and behavior of water. More recently, computer simulations of various kinds have been employed to explore how well these models are able to predict the observed physical properties of water.
This work has led to a gradual refinement of our views about the structure of liquid water, but it has not produced any definitive answer. There are several reasons for this, but the principal one is that the very concept of "structure" (and of water "clusters") depends on both the time frame and volume under consideration. Thus questions of the following kinds are still open:
How do you distinguish the members of a "cluster" from adjacent molecules that are not in that cluster?
Since individual hydrogen bonds are continually breaking and re-forming on a picosecond time scale, do water clusters have any meaningful existence over longer periods of time? In other words, clusters are transient, whereas "structure" implies a molecular arrangement that is more enduring. Can we then legitimately use the term "clusters" in describing the structure of water?
The possible locations of neighboring molecules around a given H2O are limited by energetic and geometric considerations, thus giving rise to a certain amount of "structure" within any small volume element. It is not clear, however, to what extent these structures interact as the size of the volume element is enlarged. And as mentioned above, to what extent are these structures maintained for periods longer than a few picoseconds?
The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
the one that heralds new discoveries,
is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'
Isaac Asimov
the one that heralds new discoveries,
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Isaac Asimov
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
New study visualizes motion of water molecules, promises new wave of electronic devices
December 22, 2017, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
A novel approach to studying the viscosity of water has revealed new insights about the behavior of water molecules and may open pathways for liquid-based electronics.
A team of researchers led by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory used a high-resolution inelastic X-ray scattering technique to measure the strong bond involving a hydrogen atom sandwiched between two oxygen atoms. This hydrogen bond is a quantum-mechanical phenomenon responsible for various properties of water, including viscosity, which determines a liquid's resistance to flow or to change shape.
While water is the most abundant substance on Earth, its behavior at a molecular level is not well understood.
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-12-visualize ... s.html#jCp
December 22, 2017, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
A novel approach to studying the viscosity of water has revealed new insights about the behavior of water molecules and may open pathways for liquid-based electronics.
A team of researchers led by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory used a high-resolution inelastic X-ray scattering technique to measure the strong bond involving a hydrogen atom sandwiched between two oxygen atoms. This hydrogen bond is a quantum-mechanical phenomenon responsible for various properties of water, including viscosity, which determines a liquid's resistance to flow or to change shape.
While water is the most abundant substance on Earth, its behavior at a molecular level is not well understood.
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-12-visualize ... s.html#jCp
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
The two oxygen atoms will negate each others effect. And so, if the first oxygen atom (the first layer of bread in the sandwich) pulled the electron cloud of the H atom so that it was stretched off center from the atom's nucleus then the second will pull it back to center. In other words, if the first caused it to be polar the second turned off its polarity.Maol wrote: to measure the strong bond involving a hydrogen atom sandwiched between two oxygen atoms.
The same is true for oxygen atoms that are surrounded by hydrogen atoms. If they are surrounded in a lopsided manner, with only two H atoms at each of two position of the tetrahedron, the electron cloud of the oxygen molecule will be stretched off center from its nucleus, making it polar. When two additional hydrogen bonds are completed--completing the four positions of the tetrahedron--the electron cloud returns to center. It is no longer stretched.
The net effect is that H bonds perfectly neutralize H2O polarity.
Another way to look at it is that its covalent bonds cause the H2O molecules to be a polar molecule and hydrogen bonds counteract this cause, making H2O into a nonpolar molecule.
This understanding (in conjunction with the realization that the strength of hydrogen bonds is dictated by the polarity of the two molecules participating in the bond) is the key to resolving ALL of H2O's anomalies.
James McGinn / Solving Tornadoes
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
The two oxygen atoms will negate each others effect. And so, if the first oxygen atom (the first layer of bread in the sandwich) pulled the electron cloud of the H atom so that it was stretched off center from the atom's nucleus then the second will pull it back to center. In other words, if the first caused it to be polar the second turned off its polarity.Maol wrote: to measure the strong bond involving a hydrogen atom sandwiched between two oxygen atoms.
The same is true for oxygen atoms that are surrounded by hydrogen atoms. If they are surrounded in a lopsided manner, with only two H atoms at each of two position of the tetrahedron, the electron cloud of the oxygen molecule will be stretched off center from its nucleus, making it polar. When two additional hydrogen bonds are completed--completing the four positions of the tetrahedron--the electron cloud returns to center. It is no longer stretched.
The net effect is that H bonds perfectly neutralize H2O polarity.
Another way to look at it is that its covalent bonds cause the H2O molecules to be a polar molecule and hydrogen bonds counteract this cause, making H2O into a nonpolar molecule.
This understanding (in conjunction with the realization that the strength of hydrogen bonds is dictated by the polarity of the two molecules participating in the bond) is the key to resolving ALL of H2O's anomalies.
James McGinn / Solving Tornadoes
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Re: The 'Missing Link' of Meteorology's Theory of Storms
More on hydrogen bond behavior. Much interesting reading in the link in this post, which leads to another (subsequent post below) on the subject of water, the next supports jimmcginn's position re nanodroplets.
Researchers explore implications of excess hydrogen bonding at the ice-vapor interface
October 3, 2017, Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
It is at a temperature of −70 °C that water molecules at the surface of ice make the most bonds with each other. (read on in the link)
Figure 2: Cross-sections of the surface of ice at different temperatures. The hexagonal structure starts to melt at temperatures below −70 °C, which initially leads to higher density of hydrogen bonds on the ice surface. At −70 °C the maximum number of hydrogen bonds is attained. Credit: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-10-explore-i ... g.html#jCp
Researchers explore implications of excess hydrogen bonding at the ice-vapor interface
October 3, 2017, Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
It is at a temperature of −70 °C that water molecules at the surface of ice make the most bonds with each other. (read on in the link)
Figure 2: Cross-sections of the surface of ice at different temperatures. The hexagonal structure starts to melt at temperatures below −70 °C, which initially leads to higher density of hydrogen bonds on the ice surface. At −70 °C the maximum number of hydrogen bonds is attained. Credit: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-10-explore-i ... g.html#jCp
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