A picture of a large symmetrical structure built from water molecules, surrounding a lone hydrogen atom.
https://media.mathstodon.xyz/media_attachments/files/112/586/072/039/765/140/original/3370ef5ffa51ac2d.jpg
A lone proton in water can attract a lot of water molecules and form a variety of interesting large structures. Nowadays chemists study these using computer simulations, and compare the results to experiments.
In 2010, Evgenii Stoyanov, Irina Stoyanova and Christopher Reed used infrared spectroscopy to argue that a lone proton often attaches itself to 6 water molecules, forming H₁₃O₆⁺, as shown here. The extra proton stays roughly within the dotted line.
So when you look at a glass of water, know that a lot of complicated and interesting things are going on in there, which scientists are still struggling to understand!
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