Title: CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater
1CHAPTER 5 Water and Seawater
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2S
- Types of Bonding
- Water Molecule Formation Configuration
- Unusual Properties
- Hydrogen Bonding
- Heat Capacity
- Phases of Water
- Adding Salts to Water
- Constituents of Seawater
- Sampling Devices
- Effects of Density and Salinity
- Hydrologic Cycle
- Composition of River Water
- Residence Times
- Dissolved Gases
- pH of Seawater
3P
Covalent Bonding
4P
Ionic Bonding
5P
6WATERS UNUSUAL PROPERTIES
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7Hydrogen bonding
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- Polarity means small negative charge at O end
- Small positive charge at H end
- Attraction between and ends of water
molecules to each other or other ions
Fig. 5.3
8Hydrogen bonding
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- Hydrogen bonds are weaker than covalent bonds but
still strong enough to result in - High surface tension
- High solubility of chemical compounds in water
- Solid, liquid, gas at Earths surface
- Unusual thermal properties
- Unusual density
9Surface tension
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10P
CALORIE
the amount of energy required to raise the
temperature of 1 gm of water 1 degree Centigrade
11HEAT CAPACITY (SPECIFIC HEAT)
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- The amount of energy required to raise the
temperature of 1 gm of a substance 1 degree
Centigrade
12P
Granite 0.19
Quartz 0.19
Soil (average) 0.70
(liquid)
0.5
(ice)
13What does this mean?
- If we had 3 cookie sheets each 1 cm deep
- One filled with water, one with soil and
one with sand - The same amount of incoming energy that would
heat the water 1oC, would heat the soil 1.4oC
and the sand 5oC
14Unusual thermal properties of H2O
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- Water - high heat capacity
- Amount of heat required to raise the temperature
of 1 gram of any substance 1o C - Water can take in/lose lots of heat without
changing temperature very much - Rocks - low heat capacity
- Rocks quickly change temperature as they
gain/lose heat
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Day/Night Temperature Differences Large on land,
small in the ocean
16Global thermostatic effects
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- Moderate temperature on Earths surface
- Equatorial oceans (hot) dont boil
- Polar oceans (cold) dont freeze solid
- Marine effect
- Oceans moderate temperature changes day/night
different seasons - Continental effect
- Land areas have greater range of temperatures
day/night and during different seasons
17Unusual thermal properties of H2O
- H2O has high boiling point
- H2O has high freezing point
- Most H2O is in the form of water (liquid) on
Earths surface (good for life) - High latent (hidden) heats of
- Vaporization/condensation
- Melting/freezing
- Evaporation
18P
Specific Heat 1.0 calories/ gm
Specific Heat 0.5 calories/gm
Fig. 5.6
19Water molecules in different states of matter
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Fig. 5.5
20Show water phase animation
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21Changes of state due to adding or subtracting heat
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- Heat is energy of moving molecules
- Temperature is measurement of average kinetic
energy
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Elements within columns share similar properties
23P
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Ionic bonding, loosely held together
25P
Dipolar water molecules break ionic bonds
by surrounding sodium and chloride ions
26CONSTITUENTS OF SEAWATER
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27Salinity
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- Total amount of solid material dissolved in water
- Typical salinity is 3.5 or 35o/oo
- Six elements make up 99 of dissolved solids in
seawater
Fig. 5.12
28SALINITY UNITS
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- PERCENT OR PARTS PER HUNDRED (PPH)
- Since open ocean salinity varies from 3.3-3.7,
we move the decimal one place to the right and
express it as 0/00 OT PARTS PER THOUSAND (PPT) - 3.3-3.7 BECOMES 33-37 o/oo
29Measuring salinity
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- Evaporation
- Chemical analysis
- Principle of constant proportions
- Major dissolved constituents in same proportion
regardless of total salinity - Measure amount of chlorine (chlorinity)
- Electrical conductivity
- Salinometer
- CTD
30Salinity variations
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- Open ocean salinity 33 to 38 o/oo
- Coastal areas salinity varies more widely
- Influx of freshwater lowers salinity or creates
brackish conditions - Greater rate of evaporation raises salinity or
creates hypersaline conditions - Salinity may vary with seasons (dry/rain)
31P
gt 100 ppm
gt1, lt100 ppm
lt 1 ppm
32P
Forchammers Principle
Although the salinity of seawater may change from
place to place, the ratio of ions to each other
remains constant
Importance You only need to measure one ion to
calculate the concentration of others - this can
be the cheapest or easiest one to measure
33How to change salinity
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- Add water
- Remove water
- Add dissolved substances
- Remove dissolved substances
34Processes that add/subtract water from oceans
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Salinity increases through
Salinity decreases through
- Precipitation (rain or snow)
- Runoff (river flow)
- Melting icebergs
- Melting sea ice
- Evaporation
- Formation of sea ice
35S
Nansen bottle
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37S
Water-sampling bottles
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Salinity is most commonly measured by
electrical conductivity
39Density of water
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- Density of water increases as temperature
decreases down to 4oC - From 4oC to 0oC density of water decreases as
temperature decreases - Density of ice is less than density of water
40Density of water
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Fig. 5.10
41S
42S
43S
44S
45S
46S
47S
48S
49P
50P