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Lecture 11
Properties of Sea Water
Chapter 5: pp. 133-155
Main points of today's lecture:
- Chemical and physical properties of sea water
- Atoms, molecules, pH and density in sea water
- Dissolved substances entering the ocean by rivers
- Nutrients and dissolved gas
Insights:
- On earth, water occurs in three states which depend on
temperature and pressure. Solid water or ice
consists of ordered molecules tightly bonded to one
another. Liquid water consists of molecules that
move relative to one another. Gaseous water or vapor
is made up of independently moving molecules.
- Despite its simple chemical composition
H2O, water is a complex substance capable
of coexisting naturally as a gas, a solid and a liquid on
earth's surface. It has an unusually high heat
capacity and tremendous solvent power, which
are understood in terms of the "polar" structure of water
molecules.
- Seawater
consists of a small quantity of salt
dissolved in water. Salt occurs as charged particles,
cations & anions, dispersed among water molecules. Also
contained in minor amounts are a wide variety of
dissolved metals, nutrients, gases and
organic compounds.
- Major constituents
in seawater include
chloride (Cl-) and sodium
(Na+) which together comprise more than 85.65%
of the total dissolved substances. Other major
constituents include sulfate (SO42-
), magnesium (Mg2+), calcium
(Ca2+), and potassium (K+).
All six make up over 99% of all of seawater's
solutes.
- Salinity
can be defined formally as the total
mass expressed in grams of all the substances dissolved in
1 kg of seawater, when all the carbonate has been converted
to oxide, all the bromine and iodine have been replaced by
chlorine, and all organic compounds have been oxidized at a
temperature of 480 °C, or simply as the total weight
in grams of dissolved salts in 1 kg of seawater expressed
as parts per thousand
(o/oo).
- Conservative substances do not change in abundance
over long periods of time.
- The major, conservative substances are present in constant
proportions; that is, their relative abundances don't change
from place to place in the oceans.
- Residence time for a given substance equals the total
amount of it in the ocean dividied by the rate it is added
(or removed) to/from the ocean.
- Density is mass/volume and varies throughout the
ocean as a function of temperature and salinity.
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