Chemistry

Cards (23)

  • Major constituents of seawater?
    Salt - NaCl
  • Minor constituents in seawater?
    Lithium and iodine
  • Trace components in seawater?
    Copper and radionuclides
  • What happens to river salts?
    Some are conservative: Not changed by biological or chemical processes
    Some are non-conservative: React with chemical or biological processes
  • Residence time (yr) = Total amount of substance in reservoir (tonnes)/ Sum of fluxes into or out of reservoir (tonnes per year)
  • Volume of the ocean 1,335,0401,335,040 *103km3 103 km^3
  • Seawater with salinity of 35 g/L has chloride conc of 19.35 g/L
  • The solubility of a gas will increase with its partial pressure
  • Henry's law - for some gases the concentration in a solvent at a known temperature is proportional to partial pressure of the dissolving gas
    c = KH * p
  • A liquid is saturated with a gas when it is at equilibrium with the gas above it.
    Factors:
    • Partial pressure of gas
    • Temperature
    • Composition of the liquid
  • Black Sea
    • Input of water to system via rivers and rainfall
    • Output via Bosphorus Strait, depth of 13 to 110 metres
    • Central Black Sea - depth of 2000 metres
    • Significantly lower salinity than typical global ocean
  • pH=pH =log10[H+] -log10 [H^+]
  • Surface seawater has a pH of 8.1
  • CO2 cycle in seawater:
    • Atmospheric CO2 equilibrates with the seawater
    • It becomes hydrated
    • Carbonic acid dissociates
  • If temperature increases CO2 in seawater decreases
  • A buffered solution resists change in pH when it is diluted or when acid or base is added
  • Oceans are well buffered against changes in pH
  • Carbonate alkalinity = [HCO3-] + [CO32-]
  • Calcium carbonate
    • Used by many planktonic organisms to form skeleton
    • Major element - concentration only slightly changes with depth
  • Sunken shells form biogenic sediments
  • Calcium carbonate forms:
    • Calcite - more stable, able to survive to greater depths
    • Aragonite - less stable, start to dissolve at shallower depths
  • Surface waters are supersaturated in calcium carbonate
    Deep oceanic waters are generally unsaturated in these compound
    Shells start to dissolve in the water column or on the seabed
  • Very little Nitrogen reaches or remains in deep ocean sediments