Why Do Microwaves Only heat up Water?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the heating properties of microwaves, particularly why water heats up effectively in microwave ovens compared to other substances like lipids and proteins. Participants explore the underlying mechanisms of microwave heating, including molecular dipoles and dielectric heating, while also questioning common misconceptions about the process.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants express confusion about why microwaves primarily heat water, questioning whether lipids and proteins heat up as well.
  • One participant explains that microwaves cause water molecules to vibrate due to their dipole moment, leading to heat generation through breaking and reforming hydrogen bonds.
  • Another participant introduces the concept of resonances, likening it to shattering a wine glass, suggesting that microwaves resonate with water molecules specifically.
  • Contrary to the initial claim, some participants argue that microwaves can heat various substances, including sugars, fats, and certain types of glass, due to their polar nature.
  • One participant clarifies that microwave heating is based on dielectric heating principles, where the electric field causes molecular rotation rather than resonance with bonds.
  • It is noted that any substance with a dipole moment can be heated in a microwave, and microwave chemistry is presented as an interesting area of research.
  • Another participant discusses the dielectric loss factor, explaining that water's high factor makes it susceptible to microwave heating, while other polar molecules also heat well, but non-polar substances do not.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the heating properties of various substances in microwaves, with some asserting that only water heats effectively while others argue that many polar substances do as well. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the extent to which lipids and other non-polar substances heat in microwaves.

Contextual Notes

There are limitations in the discussion regarding the definitions of terms like "dielectric loss factor" and "dipole moment," as well as the specific conditions under which different substances heat in microwaves. Some assumptions about the mechanisms of heating are not fully explored.

johnnyapplese
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I understand that microwaves cause water in food to heat up, but I don't understand why it is only water. Why won't the say lipids or protein molecules in food heat up why is it only water. And on a related topic is there a way to use frequency to not heat up water but to lengthen the bonds between the hydrogen and oxygen in water?
 
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Who says lipids don't heat up in a microwave?
 
pzona do they?
Microwave is acting by switching the electric field, so that molecules that have dipole moment such as water start vibrating, moreover hydrogen bonds between water molecules break and when they reform heat evolving is supplied to surrounding molecules which causes the whole dish to heat up.
 
The simplest explanation is that of resonances. Think of a wine glass. In order to shatter it you need exactly the right frequency to do so. The same is true for heating up things with radiation, the heating is caused by the radiation of a certain frequency resonating with the bonds within a molecule - and microwaves just happen to be perfect for the bonds found within water.
 
Microwave ovens heat up a lot more than just water. They also heat sugars, fats, waxes, and can even efficiently heat some types of glass. These substances heat efficiently because they are very polar, electrically.

Kracatoan said:
The simplest explanation is that of resonances. Think of a wine glass. In order to shatter it you need exactly the right frequency to do so. The same is true for heating up things with radiation, the heating is caused by the radiation of a certain frequency resonating with the bonds within a molecule - and microwaves just happen to be perfect for the bonds found within water.

This is a common misconception. Microwave ovens work on the principles of dielectric heating, not any form of resonance. The microwave radiation causes the molecules to rotate back and forth with the electric field to generate heat. It doesn't really have anything to do with the bonds.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microwave_oven#Principles
 
Anything with a dipole moment can be heated in a microwave. Microwave chemistry is a pretty neat area of research and has led to things such as microwave digestion for sample preparation.
 
Water heats well in a microwave oven because it is a molecular dipole and has a significantly high dielectric loss factor. That makes it susceptible to being affected by the oscillating electrical field. Other strongly polar molecules such as nitrobenzene and chloroform also heat well, whereas symmetrical molecules such as benzene and carbon tetrachloride are microwave transparent and don't heat - they are used to make microwave thermometers. Lipids don't heat well because they have a very low dielectric loss factor and have a non-polar nature. However they do heat, especially in larger volumes. Solid materials such as sugar and salt don't heat well, but they will when they had dissolved in water, although, for sugar, the mechanism is primarily an effect upon the specific heat capacity.
 

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