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Ocean Chemistry

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Title: Ocean Chemistry


1
Ocean Chemistry
  • Unit 5

2
Ocean Chemistry
  • The chemical properties of the ocean are
    important to understand because the marine
    environment supports the greatest abundance of
    life on earth.
  • This life is largely made up of the same
    chemicals that comprise the oceanwater and
    salts.

3
Reflection
  • 1. Why is it important to understand the
    chemistry of the ocean?
  • 2. What is the chemical make-up of the life in
    the oceans? What is it similar to?

4
Properties of Water
  • H20 is a compound of 2 hydrogen atoms
  • and one oxygen atom in a fixed proportion.
  • Held together by covalent bonds
  • (sharing of e-)
  • Molecular shape is bent into a 105 angle
  • Electrically unbalanced because of the angle and
    thus considered polar because of the () and (-)
    end
  • H bonds form between water molecules and other
    charged substances due to the polarity.
  • This allows water to stick to itself, a process
    known as cohesion
  • Adhesion is when water H bonds to other materials
  • Universal solvent it will dissolve almost
    anything

5
Reflection
  • 3. What makes up a water molecule?
  • 4. How is it bonded? Give details.
  • 5. Discuss the polarity of water.
  • 6. Write about its adhesive, cohesive and solvent
    properties.

6
Seawater
  • NaCl dissolves in water because of its polarity
  • 97.2 of Earths surface water is marine
  • Seawater is 96.5 water and 3.5 dissolved
    substances (mostly salts)
  • Earth has 5.5 trillion tons of salt
  • Nearly every element found in the crust and
    atmosphere is also present in the ocean
  • Major constituents of seawater
  • H, O, Cl, Na, Mg, Ca, K, SO43-, and HCO3-
  • Elements lt1 ppm are called trace elements

7
Reflection
  • 7. Use the previous slide to describe marine
    water (saltwater) in detail. Include in your
    description all of the properties and composition
    that is given.

8
Sources of Ocean Salts
  • Weathering
  • running water dissolves crustal rock
  • Excess volatiles
  • hydrothermal vents (underwater volcanoes) on the
    ocean floor leak chemicals (C02,Cl, S, H, F, N)
    into the water

9
Chemical Equilibrium
  • The ocean is in chemical equilibrium
  • For the most part, ions are added to the ocean at
    the same rate they are subtracted
  • Certain ions have longer residency times then
    others
  • Addition of salts from the mantle and weathering
    are balanced by the subtraction of minerals bound
    into sediments

10
Reflection
  • 8. Where do the salts and other minerals in the
    ocean come from?
  • 9. What is meant by equilibrium? How does the
    ocean maintain equilibrium?

11
Water and Heat
  • Heat is energy produced by random vibrations of
    atoms or molecules.
  • Four sources of heat in the ocean
  • solar energy
  • radioactive decay
  • heat from Earth formation
  • artificial heat from humans
  • Temperature is an objects response to input or
    removal of heat.
  • 1C 1.8F
  • OC is freezing
  • 100C is boiling
  • About 1m (3.3 ft) evaporates from the surface of
    the ocean every year.

12
Reflection
  • 10. Define heat.
  • 11. What are four sources of heat in the ocean?
  • 12. Define temperature and note the freezing and
    boiling points for water.
  • 13. How much water evaporates from the ocean each
    year?

13
Colligative Properties of Seawater
  • Heat Capacity
  • heat required to raise 1 g of substance 1C
  • Heat capacity of water is among the highest of
    all known substances.
  • Water can absorb (or release) large amounts of
    heat with little change in temp.
  • The heat capacity of seawater decreases with
    increasing salinity (saltwater is less able to
    hang on to heat)

14
Colligative Properties of Seawater
  • Salinity
  • total quantity of dissolved inorganic solids in
    water (NOT just salt!)
  • Salinity is usually 3.3-3.7 depending on
    evaporation, precipitation, and freshwater runoff
  • Proportion of Cl to salinity is constant
  • Salinity in 1.81 x Cl
  • As salinity increases, freezing point decreases
  • Gives seawater a natural antifreeze property
    (saltwater freezes at a lower temp than fw)
  • Salt water evaporates more slowly than fw (salt
    hangs onto water)

15
Colligative Properties of Seawater
  • Osmotic Pressure
  • O.P. of organisms increases with increasing
    salinity (organisms lose more water when salinity
    is higher)

16
Reflection
  • 14. What are the 3 given colligative properties
    of seawater?
  • 15. Describe, in detail, the heat capacity of
    water.
  • 16. Describe, in detail, the salinity of sea
    water.
  • 17. How is the osmotic pressure of organisms
    affected by salinity?

17
Water Density
  • Density of water is a function of salinity and
    temperature.
  • Seawater density increases with increasing
    salinity, increasing pressure, and decreasing
    temperature.

18
Water Density
  • Freezing Density
  • During the transition from liquid to solid, water
    expands
  • This makes ice less dense than liquid water, and
    thus floats.
  • Density of ice is .917 g/cm3
  • Density of liquid water is .999 g/cm3.
  • Density of water increases as seawater freezes.
  • Ice crystals are pure water because they exclude
    the salt.
  • The left over cold, salty water is very dense.

19
Water Density
  • Ocean Layers
  • The ocean layers by density stratification.
  • Surface (mixing) zone
  • 2
  • least dense zone
  • Top of the sea can actually be fw
  • Pycnocline
  • 18
  • density increases with depth
  • Deep zone
  • 80
  • below 1000m, densest layer

20
Reflection
  • 18. How does salinity and temperature affect the
    density of the ocean?
  • 19. Describe in detail, the relationship of
    freezing temperatures and water.
  • 20. Describe the result of density stratification
    and the three layers of the ocean associated with
    it.

21
Pycnocline
  • Thermocline Halocline Pycnocline
  • Halocline - the area where the salinity changes
    rapidly.
  • Thermocline - the layer that changes in temp
    rapidly.
  • Can range in temp from 30.5-37.5F
  • Average temp of ocean being 38F.
  • Water masses (having characteristic temp and
    salinity, density) get trapped at great depths.
  • The pycnocline isolates 80 of the ocean from the
    20 circulating on the surface.

22
Reflection
  • 21. What are the two layers that make up the
    pycnocline?
  • 22. What is special about each of these two
    layers?
  • 23. How does the pycnocline isolate 80 of the
    water in the ocean?

23
Dissolved Gases
  • Gases dissolve most readily in cold seawater
  • Plants and animals in the ocean require dissolved
    gases in order to survive
  • Nitrogen
  • 48 of gas in ocean (atmosphere 78)
  • living organisms require N to build proteins, but
    bottom dwelling bacteria must fix the N into a
    useable form for them
  • Oxygen
  • 36 of gas in ocean (atmosphere has 100x more)
  • Primary source of O2 in ocean is from plants
  • most of the oxygen is near the surface and
    diffuses into the atmosphere
  • Carbon dioxide
  • 15 of gas in ocean (60x more in ocean than
    atmosphere)
  • used by phytoplankton- low at surface

24
Reflection
  • 24. Where does gas most readily diffuse in the
    ocean?
  • 25. What are three major gasses found in the
    ocean? In what quantity is each found? How are
    they each used in the ocean?

25
pH
  • Acidity (release of H) and alkalinity (release
    of OH-) is measured by pH
  • The ocean contains buffers to prevent large
    swings in pH when acids or bases are introduced
  • pH scale
  • 0-----------------------------7------------------
    ----------14
  • acid neutral base
  • (alkaline)

Pure water
Seawater 7.8
26
Reflection
  • 26. Explain how pH works and in specific, the pH
    of the ocean.
  • The End
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