Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9479715 Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 2005 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
The salinity of seawater has been defined in terms of the ratio of its electrical conductivity to that of a standard potassium chloride solution. The potassium chloride solution is obtained by dissolution of high-purity potassium chloride in ultrapure water. However, even high-purity potassium chloride is not 100% pure, and suppliers do not certify it, as the standard for electrical conductivity. We prepared defined solutions using several kinds of high-purity potassium chloride and examined the difference between the measured electrical conductivity ratio and the value calculated from the experimental equation given in the UNESCO background papers. The differences between the electrical conductivity ratios of the solutions made from the various potassium chloride reagents were equivalent to about 0.0012 in salinity. The solution may not actually become a standard for salinity measurements even if it is prepared exactly according to the present definition. The lot dependency of the electrical conductivity ratio of the potassium chloride solutions may result in a systematic error in the measurement of salinity.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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