Title: Properties of seawater
1Properties of seawater
2Where is it on Earth?
Water covers about 71 of Earths surface
3The hydrologic cycle (aka the water cycle)
4Water
- Molecular structure
- H2O consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen
atom
Covalent bonds electrons are being shared
between the hydrogen and oxygen atoms
5Water a polar molecule
The shared electrons (e-) spend more time around
the oxygen atom than the hydrogen atoms causing
the molecule to have polarity
-
-
6When charged region comes close to opposite
charge, a hydrogen bond is formed
Hydrogen bonds are extremely strong, causing
water molecules to stick together like magnets
(cohesion)
7Effects of Hydrogen Bonds
- Liquid water at room temperature
- Without them water would be a gas
- Cohesion /Adhesion
- Water molecules stick together and to other
things (adhesion) - Water droplets on a leaf
- Viscosity
- Tendency to resist flow
- Colder water more viscosity
8More Effects of Hydrogen Bonds
- Surface tension
- Skinlike surface
- Water striders can walk on water
- Ice Floats
- Frozen water is less dense than liquid water
9Salts and Salinity
- Salinity includes the total quantity of all
dissolved inorganic solids in seawater.
Sodium chloride is the most common and abundant
sea salt
NaCl (Compound)
Cl (Element)
Na (Element)
10Why Study Salinity?
- Determines the distribution of plants and animals
that live in the ocean. - Affects other properties of seawater, such as its
density and the amount of dissolved oxygen it can
contain.
11Significant Values
- Average salinity of the worlds oceans is 35 ppt
- Fresh water has a salinity of lt 1 ppt
- Inshore waters with salinity values between 1
25 ppt are called brackish. - Waters with salinity greater than 40 ppt are
called hypersaline.
12Salinity Hydrometer Method
- Addition of salts to pure water causes an
increase in density. Salinity can be calculated
by measuring the specific gravity of a water
sample using a hydrometer, correcting for the
effect of temperature and converting the readings
to salinity by using conversion tables. - Specific Gravity density of sample
- density of pure water
13Ionic bonds exchanging
Na atom
Cl atom
Lost.gained
ATTRACTION
Sodium (Na) 11 protons CHARGE 1 10 electrons
Chlorine (Cl) CHARGE -1 17 protons 18
electrons
14Ions atoms with charge
Chlorine -1
Sodium 1
Lost one electron
Gained one electrons
15Salt
Water molecules
Water tends to separate ionic substances
16Salinity
- Salinity Mass of dissolved substances (g)
Mass of water sample (g)
Density of water 1 gram per 1 ml
17How much salt to add?
- How many grams of salt is in1000 mL of 20 ppt
saltwater? - 1000 ml H20 1000 g H20
- Therefore there is 20 grams of salt mixed with
980 grams of water.
18- How much salt is in a 1000 ml sample of 40 ppt
seawater? - 40 grams of salt mixed with 960 mL of water
19- How many grams of salt would you find in 4.5
Liters of a 30 ppt solution? - 135 g of salt
-
- How many grams of salt and how many grams of
water would you find in 2 Liters of 25 ppt
solution? - 50 g of salt and 1,950 g of water
- How many grams of salt and how many grams of
water in 3.2 Liters of 40 ppt solution? - 128 g of salt and 3,072 g of water
20Seawater
- 11 major constituents that make up 99.99 of all
dissolved materials
21The Principle of Constant Proportions
- No matter how much the salinity varies, the
proportions of key elements and compounds do not.
22Determining Salinity
- If you know how much of one sea water chemical,
you can figure out the salinity using the
Principle of constant proportions - Usually the chloride ion (Cl-) is the element
that is measured which will make up 55.0 of the
total salinity - If you measure 19 ppt of chloride per 1000 parts
of water. What is the salinity? - 19 ppt chlorides 55.0 of total salinity
- Or, 19 ppt chlorides .550 x (total salinity)
- Or, 19 ppt chlorides
- .550
- Or 34.5 ppt total salinity
23Determining Salinity
- If you know how much of one sea water chemical,
you can figure out the salinity using the
Principle of constant proportions. - Chlorinity measured in ppt
- The ratio of chlorine, bromine, and iodine ions
to total salinity - Salinity 1.80655 x chlorinity
24- What would be the total salinity of a sample
having 20 ppt chlorinity? - 36.1 ppt
25Where do the salts come from?
- Weathering of minerals on continents
-
26Where do the salts come from?
2) Volcanic gases
27OBSERVATION Salts are put into the ocean from
weathering and volcanic gases
PREDICTION SHOULDNT THE OCEANS BE GETTING
SALTIER?
28.but they are not!
SALT INPUT SALT REMOVAL
- Salts are removed by
- Organisms
- Sedimentary rock formation
- Hydrothermal alteration
29Processes affecting salinity
- INCREASE SALINITY
- Evaporation
- Sea ice formation
- DECREASE SALINITY
- Precipitation
- Freshwater runoff
- Sea ice melting
30Active Transport, Osmoregulators, and
Osmoconformers
- Osmosis through a semipermeable cell membrane is
called - Passive transport
- The process of cells moving materials from low
to high concentrations is - Active transport
- Takes energy
31- Animals that can use active transport to regulate
water concentrations are osmoregulators - Organisms that have their internal salinity rise
and fall along with the water are - osmoconformers
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