Experiments with Water

A free interactive lesson on water's unusual properties for Class 5 — why water dissolves more substances than any other liquid, how surface tension supports a paper clip, and how capillarity pulls water 100 metres up a tree. Based on NCERT Class 5 Water. Includes quiz.

Class 5 ScienceClass 5 / Grade 5Ages 7–10
Lesson
🫧 Experiments with Water
Water is the strangest and most amazing liquid.🧊Expands when frozen💧Universal solvent🫧Surface tension♻️Endless recyclingNo other liquid behaves quite like water.

Water seems ordinary — it's clear, tasteless, odourless. But it is the strangest liquid on Earth. It expands when it freezes instead of shrinking. It dissolves more substances than almost any other liquid. Insects can walk on its surface. It flows upwards through plants against gravity. Let's explore why water is so extraordinary.

Water as the universal solvent

Water is called the universal solvent because it dissolves more substances than any other liquid. This happens because water molecules are polar — one end is slightly positive and the other slightly negative. This polarity allows water molecules to surround and break apart ions in salts and dissolve a huge variety of chemicals.

This property is why blood can carry nutrients and waste products, why ocean water is salty, and why your body uses water as the medium for nearly every chemical reaction.

Surface tension

Water molecules are attracted to each other (cohesion). At the surface, molecules have no neighbours above them, so they are pulled downward and sideways — creating a "skin" of tension. This surface tension is strong enough to support small objects denser than water, like a paper clip or a pond skater insect.

Surface tension also causes water to form spherical droplets — a sphere has the minimum surface area for a given volume, minimising the number of surface molecules under tension.

Capillarity

Capillarity (or capillary action) is the ability of water to flow through narrow spaces against gravity. It happens because of two forces: adhesion (water molecules sticking to the walls of the tube) and cohesion (water molecules pulling each other along).

Capillarity is essential for plants — it draws water from roots up through narrow xylem tubes to leaves, even in trees 100 metres tall. It's also why a paper towel soaks up water and why blood moves through tiny capillaries.

Frequently asked questions

Why is water called the universal solvent?

Water dissolves more substances than any other liquid because its molecules are polar — they have a slightly positive and negative end. This polarity allows water to surround and break apart ions in salts and dissolve many organic and inorganic compounds.

What is surface tension?

Surface tension is the 'skin-like' force at the surface of water, created by water molecules attracting each other. It is strong enough to support small objects like paper clips and lets pond skater insects walk on water.

What is capillarity?

Capillarity (or capillary action) is the ability of water to rise through narrow tubes against gravity. It results from adhesion (water sticking to tube walls) and cohesion (water molecules attracting each other). It is how water travels from roots to leaves in plants.

How does water reach the top of a tall tree?

Through capillarity in the xylem tubes combined with transpiration pull — as water evaporates from leaves, it creates tension that pulls water up from the roots. Capillarity alone can lift water about 1 metre; transpiration pull does the rest in tall trees.

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