How wood is less dense than water?

  • Thread starter Thread starter AakashPandita
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Water Wood
AI Thread Summary
Wood is generally less dense than water, allowing it to float, but this is not universally true for all types of wood. The discussion highlights that the density of wood is influenced by its composition, including cellulose and lignin, as well as the presence of air-filled gaps. It is emphasized that density should be defined carefully, as some woods can be denser than water, particularly when freshly cut. The relationship between density and kinetic energy is also debated, with some participants questioning its relevance in this context. Overall, the complexity of density in relation to wood and water is acknowledged, with a call for clarity in definitions and conditions.
AakashPandita
Messages
157
Reaction score
0
Wood is less dense than water.
This means that particles of water are more close together than particles of wood.
And so the kinetic energy of water particles should be less than the kinetic energy of wood particles.
But it is not so.
Why?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I'd revert your question: why do you think it should be so?

BTW: Actually the first of your doubts is correct - small molecules of water are closer to each other that large molecules of cellulosis in wood, separated by large gaps.
 
I do not know that KE part.
 
Most wood has lots of hollow spaces in it at the macro level. Water does not.

Your statement "Wood is less dense than water" is absolutely incorrect. It WOULD be correct to say "some wood is less dense than water", and it would even be correct to say "most wood is less dense than water" but I can name you dozens of woods that are NOT less dense than water.

EDIT: and if you are willing to consider wood from a tree that has been just now cut down, I can name even more dozens of woods that are more dense than water.
 
Be careful with how you define density. If you take a block of metal and put a big hole in the middle, has its density changed? (Yes and no, depending on whether you are talking about the bulk density or the skeletal density). Wood has lots of "holes" in it filled with air, which has practically no density relative to condensed phases.

Perhaps molar volume is a more instructive value than density for your understanding. Take the theoretical density (g/cm^3) and divide by molecular weight (g/mol) to get the molar volume (mol/cm^3).
 
uby said:
Be careful with how you define density.

The OP was comparing wood to water and it seems totally reasonable to me to say that if something sinks in water, it is more dense that water. Why is this not a perfectly reasonable way to look at it?

I was commenting ONLY on his statement about density. I believe your comment is more intended to address the issue of kinectic energy, yes?
 
AakashPandita said:
Wood is less dense than water.
This means that particles of water are more close together than particles of wood.
And so the kinetic energy of water particles should be less than the kinetic energy of wood particles.
But it is not so.
Why?

I don't see how kinetic energy applies to this. It is perfectly possible for a hot fluid to have something much colder than it floating on the surface.
 
I was only commenting in reference to the original poster's conception about the relationship between density and bond length.
 
AakashPandita said:
Wood is less dense than water.
This means that particles of water are more close together than particles of wood.
Actually the second statement does not follow from the first one in general. Only if the two materials were made from the same kind of particles.
Heavy particles that are farther apart may result in higher density than lighter particles which are closer together.

As an example, the nearest neighbor distance (minimum distance between two atoms) in lead is 3.5 Angstrom and in aluminum is 2.9 Angstrom. The atoms of aluminum in a piece of aluminum are closer than the atoms of lead in a piece of lead. However the density of lead is about 4 times larger than that of aluminum. Of course the light aluminum atoms have smaller radius so they can come closer to each other and still the result is a density lower than that of lead.
If you think about the packing fraction rather than the distance between particles, then again there is no simple relationship with density.

I don't know where did you get your idea about the part about the kinetic energy. Are you thinking about thermal expansion, maybe?
 
Last edited:
  • #10
okay...i understood wood is less dense because it has gaps at the macro-level.
 
  • #11
AakashPandita said:
okay...i understood wood is less dense because it has gaps at the macro-level.

The reason is complicated and not solely due to "gaps". Wood is made primarily of water, cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. ALL of these are made up of oxygen and hydrogen and all but water have carbon as well. The molecular structure of these will mainly determine it's density, but carbon itself has an atomic weight of 6 while oxygen has an atomic weight of 8, making carbon lighter than oxygen. So for equal sizes, any molecules with carbon would be less dense than those with only oxygen. So if these are less dense than water, then they will contribute to wood's ability to float.
 
  • #12
I think you sub-estimate the role of gaps in this case. The theory regarding the relative mass of carbon and oxygen atoms is nice but probably not quite right.
Some of the compounds that you mention (cellulose, lignin) are denser than water even though they have plenty of carbon.
And anyway, wood that was subject to pressure high enough to eliminate most of the air will sink in water.
 
  • #13
nasu said:
I think you sub-estimate the role of gaps in this case. The theory regarding the relative mass of carbon and oxygen atoms is nice but probably not quite right.
Some of the compounds that you mention (cellulose, lignin) are denser than water even though they have plenty of carbon.
And anyway, wood that was subject to pressure high enough to eliminate most of the air will sink in water.

I didn't mean to downplay the role of gaps, I just wanted to add that the density also depends on what the object is actually made up of. Gaps and air are most definitely a large factor.
 
  • #14
You guys know a lot more about this than me, but I do feel obliged to mention one problem that I have with the original question. This is basically just an extrapolation of Phinds' first post. Everyone is assuming that the scenario is in reference to liquid water (at STP?). To me, though, that is something that should be specified in order to obtain relevant opinions. After all, the solid, gaseous, and plasma phases all have vastly different densities and structural integrity than does the typical liquid one. Any wood, and almost anything else, will float on a sufficient thickness of ice even though it has low density, but balsa and maybe cork are the only ones that I can think of which might do so on steam. (I've never seen a pure steam environment, though, so I don't even know if that's possible.)
 
  • #15
Sure Danger, but unless stated otherwise I'm going to assume water to mean liquid water at STP.
 
  • #16
As do I; I just thought that it might be worth mentioning. Assumptions can get you into trouble. :smile:
 
  • #17
Drakkith said:
The reason is complicated and not solely due to "gaps". Wood is made primarily of water, cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. ALL of these are made up of oxygen and hydrogen and all but water have carbon as well. The molecular structure of these will mainly determine it's density, but carbon itself has an atomic weight of 6 while oxygen has an atomic weight of 8, making carbon lighter than oxygen. So for equal sizes, any molecules with carbon would be less dense than those with only oxygen. So if these are less dense than water, then they will contribute to wood's ability to float.

That sort of argument is OK when discussing the relative densities of gases but, once the molecules start packing together in a condensed form (especially with gaps) I think the conclusions are not certain. (Take the anomalous expansion of water, for instance).
 
  • #18
sophiecentaur said:
That sort of argument is OK when discussing the relative densities of gases but, once the molecules start packing together in a condensed form (especially with gaps) I think the conclusions are not certain. (Take the anomalous expansion of water, for instance).

Who ever said the conclusions were certain?
 
  • #19
Drakkith said:
Who ever said the conclusions were certain?

Don't we aim in that direction?
 
  • #20
thanks.
 
Back
Top