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  • Sometimes the simplest questions have the most amazing answers.

  • Like how can trees be so tall? It's a question that doesn't even seem

  • like it needs an answer.

  • Trees just are tall. Some of them are over 100 meters.

  • Why should there be a height limit?

  • I'll tell you why. Tress need to transport water from their roots up into their topmost

  • branches in order to survive. And that is no trivial task.

  • There is a limit to the height that water can be sucked up a tube - it's 10 meters.

  • If you suck on a long vertical straw, the water will go no higher than 10 meters. At

  • this point there will be a perfect vacuum at the top of the straw and the water will

  • start to boil spontaneously. For a tree to raise water 100 meters, it would have to create

  • a pressure difference of 10 atmospheres.

  • How would trees do that?

  • When I posed this conundrum, a lot of people said the answer is transpiration. And that's

  • when water evaporates from the leaf, pulling up the water molecules behind it. Now that's

  • clearly a mechanism a tree can use to create suction, but it doesn't help us overcome this

  • 10 meter limit. The lowest the pressure can go is a pure vacuum,

  • which I imagine is not happening inside of tree leaves, right?

  • Right, Hank. So you might suspect that a tree does not contain continuous straw-like tubes

  • The tree effectively has valves in it. So you don't have a column of water

  • This big tube that you're saying needs to be full of water is actually made up of cells.

  • Although these are good speculations, they don't turn out to be correct.

  • Scientists who study trees find that the xylem tubes that transport water do contain a continuous

  • water column. So how else could the tree transport water from the roots to the leaves?

  • They don't suck, they don't use a vacuum.

  • OK, so how do they do it?

  • Squeezing like a cow udder all the way up. They have little tree muscles in there.

  • Yeah. Besides being a giant waste of energy, all

  • of the cells that make up the xylem tubes are all dead.

  • What about osmotic pressure? If there is more solute in the roots than in the surrounding

  • soil, water would be pushed up the tree. But some trees live in mangroves, where the water

  • is so salty that osmotic pressure actually acts in the other direction so the tree needs

  • additional pressure to suck water into the tree.

  • Then it must be capillary action. The thinner the tube, the higher the water can climb.

  • But the tubes in a tree are too wide - at 20-200 micrometers in diameter, water should

  • rise less than a meter.

  • So how do trees do it?

  • Well one of the assumptions we made is wrong: The lowest the pressure can go is a pure vacuum

  • pure vacuum pure vacuum

  • In a gas, this is true. When you eliminate all of the gas molecules, the pressure is

  • zero and you have a perfect vacuum.

  • But in a liquid, you can go lower than 0 pressure and actually get negative pressures. In a

  • solid, we would think of this as tension. This means that the molecules are pulling

  • on each other and their surroundings.

  • As the water evaporates from the pores of the cell wall, they create immense negative

  • pressures of -15 atmospheres in an average tree. Think about the air-water interface

  • at the pore. There is one atmosphere of pressure pushing in and negative 15 atmospheres of

  • suction on the other side. So why doesn't the meniscus break? Because the pores are

  • tiny, only 2-5 nanometres in diameter. At this scale, water's high surface tension ensures

  • the air-water boundary can withstand huge pressures without caving.

  • As you move down the tree, the pressure increases, up to atmospheric at the roots. So you can

  • have a large pressure difference between the top and bottom of the tree because the pressure

  • at the top is so negative.

  • But hang on, if the pressure near the top is negative 15 atmospheres, shouldn't the

  • water be boiling?

  • Yes. Yes it should.

  • But changing phase from liquid to gas requires activation energy. And that can come in the

  • form of a nucleation site like a tiny air bubble. That's why it's so important that

  • the xylem tubes contain no air bubbles, and they can do this because unlike a straw, they

  • have been water-filled from the start. This way, water remains in the metastable liquid

  • state when it really should be boiling.

  • It's just like supercooled water remains liquid when it really should be ice. So you could

  • say that the water in a tree is supersucked because it remains liquid at such negative

  • pressures.

  • And why are trees moving all this water up the tree? I want you to make a guess, say

  • it out loud. For photosynthesis?

  • Actually, no. Less than 1% of the water is used in photosynthetic reactions. Any other

  • ideas? Ok what about growth? Well 5% of the water

  • is used to make new cells. Well, so then what happens to the other 95%

  • of the water? It just evaporates.

  • For each molecule of carbon dioxide a tree takes in, it loses hundreds of water molecules

  • of water.

  • Woah.

  • Can you believe how amazing this is? Trees create huge negative pressures of 10's of

  • atmospheres, by evaporating water through nanoscale pores, sucking water up 100m, in

  • a state where it should be boiling but can't because of the perfect xylem tubes contain

  • no air bubbles, just so that most of it can evaporate in the process of absorbing a couple

  • molecules of carbon dioxide.

  • I will never look at a tree the same way again.

  • I'd like to say a huge thank you to Hank, Henry and Professor Poliakoff for making on

  • camera hypotheses. This is an essential part of the scientific process even if your hypothesis

  • turns out to be wrong. As Einstein said, "a person who has never

  • made a mistake has never tried anything new." I've always wondered what it would be like

  • to be on this side of a Veritasium video.

  • Now I'd be surprised if you weren't already subscribed to these guys, but if you're not,

  • go click on these annotations and check out their channels. You may just learn something.

  • I'd also like to thank Professor John Sperry from the University of Utah. He walked me

  • through all of this in an hour-long Skype conversation so I'm going to put a link to

  • his website in the description. We're looking at pressures here below atmospheric,

  • is that right? That's right. Below atmospheric. This is liquid

  • pressure not gas pressure. So it's a common misconception that oh, you can't have you

  • know negative pressures because there's no molecules left. You know, the definition of

  • pure vacuum is zero molecules. That's for a gas, ok. So just to be clear...

  • I think this was one of my big problems in understanding this.

  • This video would have been impossible without CGP Grey. When I told him in London about

  • this idea in London... And I felt like 'pssshhh mind just blown with

  • this whole thing' He said it was going to be really hard to

  • explain and when he says it's hard to explain you know things are going to be tough. So

  • thank you for all your input to this script.

  • And thank you for watching. Making this video has been a real odyssey for me so thank you

  • for joining me on this journey. I really appreciate all of your comments and if you haven't subscribed

  • to the channel already you can click the annotation or click the link above and join me on my

  • next scientific adventure.

  • I made a video promising to make a video about the answer to this. I proposed the problem

  • like a couple months ago, and I was like "subscribe to the channel and I'll give you the answer

  • next week." Hahaha Oh, the lies.

  • Drive it at the right frequency. Oh

  • Yes!! Success is frightening.

Sometimes the simplest questions have the most amazing answers.

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