Hydrophobic means something doesn’t like water, it pushes it away.
Imagine you're playing with a sponge and some oil in the kitchen. The sponge is hydrophilic, it loves water, so it easily soaks it up. But if you put oil on the sponge, it just sits there, not wanting to mix with the water.
Hydrophobic things are like that oil. They don’t want to be wet. Think of a duck’s feathers, they’re hydrophobic, which is why water rolls off them like little balls instead of sticking around.
Why does this happen?
Water molecules like to stick together, but hydrophobic materials don’t want to mix with them. It's like when you put a drop of water on a waxed car, the water just sits there, not trying to go anywhere.
If you put oil on water, it floats because oil is hydrophobic and doesn't mix well with water. That’s why when you make salad dressing, sometimes you have to shake it up, the oil and water don’t like each other at first!
So hydrophobic things are like shy kids at a party, they just want to stay dry and not get mixed in!Hydrophobic means something doesn’t like water, it pushes it away.
Imagine you're playing with a sponge and some oil in the kitchen. The sponge is hydrophilic, it loves water, so it easily soaks it up. But if you put oil on the sponge, it just sits there, not wanting to mix with the water.
Hydrophobic things are like that oil. They don’t want to be wet. Think of a duck’s feathers, they’re hydrophobic, which is why water rolls off them like little balls instead of sticking around.
Why does this happen?
Water molecules like to stick together, but hydrophobic materials don’t want to mix with them. It's like when you put a drop of water on a waxed car, the water just sits there, not trying to go anywhere.
If you put oil on water, it floats because oil is hydrophobic and doesn't mix well with water. That’s why when you make salad dressing, sometimes you have to shake it up, the oil and water don’t like each other at first!
So hydrophobic things are like shy kids at a party, they just want to stay dry and not get mixed in!
Examples
- Your shoes stay dry on a rainy day because they are made of hydrophobic material.
- Water beads up on a leaf due to its hydrophobic surface.
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See also
- How Does Water Molecules | Arbor Scientific Work?
- What is De-ionized water?
- Why Is Water Blue? | Forces Of Nature | BBC Earth Science?
- Why Water Dissolves (Almost) Everything?
- Why does ice float on water?