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Water-Absorbing Materials

Materials We Use: Water-Absorbing Materials

Water-Absorbing Materials

Water-Absorbing Materials

NCERT anchor

Looking Around 2 — activities like wiping spills, using towels, and observing which classroom/home materials soak up water and which don't.

What you'll learn

  • Some materials soak up (absorb) water, like a cloth towel or sponge.
  • Some materials do not absorb water and stay dry, like plastic or metal.
  • We choose absorbing materials for towels, mops, and napkins.

Key concepts

Verbal: A material that absorbs water takes it in and becomes wet/heavy; a material that does not absorb stays dry.

Symbolic: Water + Sponge → Wet, heavier sponge (absorbed). Water + Plastic sheet → Water stays on top (not absorbed).

Level 1 — Materials that absorb water

Cloth, cotton, sponge, and paper soak up water.

Level 1 — Materials that do NOT absorb water

Plastic, metal, and glass do not soak up water; water stays on the surface.

Level 1 — Everyday uses

UseMaterial chosen
Towel to dry handsCloth (absorbs)
RaincoatPlastic (does not absorb, keeps you dry)
Kitchen mopCloth/sponge (absorbs)

Level 2 — Testing absorption

Drop water on cloth and on plastic — cloth becomes wet through, plastic keeps water as droplets on top.

Level 2 — India

Cotton gamcha (towel) used to dry off after a bath; plastic sheets used to cover things during monsoon rains.

Worked example

You spill water on the floor. Would a cloth or a plastic sheet clean it up better? Why?

Step 1 — Cloth is made of fibres that soak up water.
Step 2 — Plastic sheet does not soak up water; it just pushes water around.
Step 3 — Cloth is better for cleaning spills.
Answer: Cloth, because it absorbs water.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhyFix
All materials soak up water equallyNot testing/observingPlastic and metal do not absorb water
Absorbing means dissolvingConfusing termsAbsorbing = soaking in; dissolving = mixing completely into a liquid
Raincoats absorb water to keep you dryBackwards logicRaincoats do NOT absorb, so water slides off instead of soaking through

Quick check

  • Name two materials that absorb water.
  • Name two materials that do NOT absorb water.
  • Why is plastic used for raincoats?

Stretch: Would a sponge or a steel plate absorb more water if you pour water on both?

Revision tip: Test a piece of cloth and a plastic bag with a few drops of water and compare.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Water-Absorbing Materials.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • NCERT anchor
  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example

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