Concentrations and Other Units of Measure: (Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, Section 1.C.1)
Concentrations and Other Units of Measure: (Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, Section 1.C.1)
Concentrations and Other Units of Measure: (Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, Section 1.C.1)
Unit conversion
Rule 1:
where
Examples:
1
Atomic weights
most commonly used in environmental engineering
Hydrogen H 1
Carbon C 12 (14 is for radioactive form of C !)
Nitrogen N 14
Oxygen O 16
Phosphorus P 31
Sulfur S 32
Chlorine Cl 35.45
Calcium Ca 40
For other elements, see the Periodic Table of Elements, on the next slide.
2
Rule 2:
PA V n A R T
Recall:
Absolute temperature (K) = temperature in degrees Celsius (oC) + 273.15
When several gases occupy a common volume in a mixture,
their partial pressures simply add up to the total pressure,
which is usually the atmospheric pressure:
RT shared temperature
Patm Ptotal PA PB PC ... (n A nB nC ...)
V shared volume
Properties of air
Apply ideal-gas law to air.
At standard pressure (P = 1 atm) and temperature (T = 15oC = 288.15 K),
one mole (n = 1 mol) of air occupies a volume V equal to
Also,
3
Properties of water
MW
moles grams
V
MW/V
liters
4
Common abbreviations
Convention: The “part” stands for “mass” in water but for “moles” in air.
Air Example:
In-class exercise
How much weight has been added on your shoulders since the CO2
concentration rose from its pre-industrial level of 270 ppm?
5
Stoichiometry
(Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, Section 3.A)
Thus, we need 6x2 + 6x1 = 18 O’s on the right; already 6 on left, need 12 more:
So, it takes 6x32 = 192 grams of oxygen to oxidize 180 grams of glucose.
6
In-class problems
Answers:
NO2 → NO + O
O + O2 → O 3 (46 grams of nitrogen dioxide produces 48 grams of ozone)
O3 + NO → O2 + NO2
Accuracy describes how close a measurement actually gets to the true value.