Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4702984 | Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2012 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The sound speeds of boric acid and sodium borate in water and 0.725 m NaCl have been measured from 0 to 50 °C and to near 1 molal. These results have been used to determine the partial molal adiabatic compressibilities of B(OH)3 and NaB(OH)4. The partial molal volumes, v¯(i), and compressibilities, κ¯(i), have been used to estimate the changes in the volume (ÎV) and compressibility (Îκ) for the dissociation of boric acid in water and average seawater (0.725 m NaCl, SA â¼Â 35 g/kg)B(OH)3+H2O=H++B(OH)4-whereÎV=v¯(H+)+v¯(B(OH)4-)-v¯(H2O)-v¯(B(OH)3)Îκ=κ¯(H+)+κ¯(B(OH)4-)-κ¯(H2O)-κ¯(B(OH)3)The calculated values of ÎV and Îκ were used to estimate the effect of applied pressure (P) on the dissociation constants (KP/K0)ln(KP/K0)=-ÎVP/RT+0.5ÎκP2/RTThe new values of Îκ in water from 0 to 1000 bar give values of KP/K0 that are in good agreement with the measured values. The values of KP/K0 at P = 1942 bar in water are slightly higher than the measured values. The new calculated values of KP/ K0 in seawater from 0 to 25 °C and to P = 1000 bar are in good agreement with the measured values. This means that the contributions of boric acid to the alkalinity of seawater in deep waters are not affected by the new values of KP/K0 determined from volume studies.
Related Topics
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Authors
Frank J. Millero, Gary K. Ward, Antonio Lo Surdo, Fen Huang,