Chemistry, asked by akshayanshu2004, 1 month ago

why water is polar molecules ?​

Answers

Answered by raginikumari37316
6

Answer:

The unequal sharing of electrons gives the water molecule a slight negative charge near its oxygen atom and a slight positive charge near its hydrogen atoms. When a neutral molecule has a positive area at one end and a negative area at the other, it is a polar molecule.

Answered by Bala7600
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Water is a polar molecule and also acts as a polar solvent. When a chemical species is said to be "polar," this means that the positive and negative electrical charges are unevenly distributed. The positive charge comes from the atomic nucleus, while the electrons supply the negative charge. It's the movement of electrons that determines polarity.

Why Water Is a Polar Solvent

The shape of each water molecule influences the way it interacts with other water molecules and with other substances. Water acts as a polar solvent because it can be attracted to either the positive or negative electrical charge on a solute. The slight negative charge near the oxygen atom attracts nearby hydrogen atoms from water or positive-charged regions of other molecules. The slightly positive hydrogen side of each water molecule attracts other oxygen atoms and negatively-charged regions of other molecules

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