Week 1 class notes

Environmental Chemistry includes:

Basic cell processes

Nutrients needed and wastes produced

Basic toxicology

 

 

Water Chemistry

 

Hydrologic Cycle

Cycle of water from land and surface water (evaporation and transpiration) to atmosphere and back by precipitation.

 

Amount of precipitation is very variable

In US:

 

Properties of water

 

Stratification due to temperature:

Arises from density changes with temperature. Water’s density increases as temperature goes down -- until 4oC. Then it becomes less dense, and freezes at 0 oC. How does this affect a deep body of water?

The epilimnion: Upper layer--warmed by sun--well oxygenated--lighter because it is warmer.

The hypolimnion: Deeper water layer--cooler--low in oxygen--may be nutrient rich from exchange with sediments.

The thermocline is the border between these regions.

 

Aquatic Chemistry

Acid-base reactions:

In water we can define acids as substances which generate H+ in solution.

Bases generate OH-.

Water is both: H2O ® H+ + OH-

The equilibrium constant for this reaction is:

but [H2O] is considered to be a constant and is combined into the Kw.

Calculate the pH of pure water:

CO2 and H2O interact in important ways to control the pH and buffer changes in pH of water:

Examples:

CO2 + H2O Û H2CO3

H2CO3 Û H+ + HCO3-

HCO3- Û H+ + CO32-

Identify: Carbonate ion

Carbonic acid

Hydrogen carbonate ion (bicarbonate ion)

 

Other phenomena which happen in water:

Oxidation is the loss of electrons:

Fe ® Fe3+ + 3 e-

Oxidation can only take place if a reduction (gain of electrons) also takes place.

O2 + 2H+ + 4 e-® 2 OH-

Then the ions formed may react:

Fe3+ + 3 OH- ® Fe(OH)3 (insoluble iron oxide)

 

 

EDTA

 

The Atmosphere

Air contains:

78.1% N2, 21.0% O2, 0.9% Ar, 0.03% CO2

Variable amounts of water vapor (1- 3%, usually)

Trace gases (Ne, CH4, Kr, Nox, Sox, O3, CO, NH3, etc.)

 

types of chemistry in the atmosphere

Absorption of light of the proper wavelength (i.e. energy) can break chemical bonds

O2 + hn ® O + O

The O radicals are very reactive and immediately do something--like

O + O2 + M ® O3 + M forming ozone.

(M is a particle surface used to hold the atoms together long enough to react. Some reactions will not happen at all without such an assistance--others will happen much less frequently )

NO or N2O may be oxidized to N2O5 which reacts with water droplets to form nitric acid.

N2O5 + H2O ® 2 HNO3

Organic gases in the air, (methane, propane etc.) can be oxidized, especially by the O radicals formed in photolysis of O2, making reactive organic species which can polymerize into larger molecules and eventually form visible particles -- smog.

 

 

Particulate matter in the atmosphere

dispersion aerosols

condensation aerosols

Most of the effects of particulates in the atmosphere are surface effects and so smallest particles have largest surface / mass ratio and greater effects than larger particles. These are least likely to settle out and are also hardest to contain in scrubbers.

 

The Geosphere

 

The Biosphere

CO2 + H2O ® {CH2O} + O2 (g)

Also organisms contribute to the breakdown of organic matter either with O2 or without:
{CH2O} + O2 (g) ® CO2 + H2O (aerobic)
or
2 {CH2O} ® CO2 (g)+ CH4 (anaerobic)

 

Cycles of Matter

Matter is continually cycled among all the areas of the environment:

 

Interchange of Materials

From

¯ To®

Atmosphere

Hydrosphere

Biosphere

Geosphere

Anthrosphere

Atmo-sphere

----

 

 

Precipitation

O2, CO2 Particulates O2, N2 other gases extracted

Hydro-sphere

Water, salt spray

 

 

----

waterminerals

sediments

Water, H2, O2

Biosphere

 

O2, CO2

 

Nutrients

----Organic matterFood, materials etc etc

Geosphere

Particles, volcanic gases 

Soluble ions

Mineral nutrients----Fuel,

minerals

Anthro-sphere

Air pollutants 

Water pollutants

FertilizersLandfills----

 

Review of Chemical Principles on Equilibrium

For the general reaction:

 

aA + bB ® cC the reaction

 

cC ® aA + bB also takes place

the quantity is a constant when the reaction is at equilibrium.

At equilibrium the rate of the forward reaction is equal to that of the reverse reaction.

Equilibrium position related to magnitude of Keq.

Relation of rate of reaction (Kinetics) to reaction constant (equilibrium)

 

 

Oxygen in Water

** Rate of dissolution depends strongly on contact and amount of surface between air and water.
** Rate of consumption depends on reactions in water which use O2.
{CH2O} + O2 ® CO2 + H2O
(degradation of organic material)

What is the qualitative effect of raising temperature on O2 concentration in water?

 

Acidity--Capability to neutralize OH-

Alkalinity--Capability to neutralize H+

pH -- Expresses concentration of H+ (and also OH-
from Kw

Strong acids (free mineral acids)

Hydrochloric HCl

Nitric HNO3

Sulfuric H2SO4 All totally ionize in water--

 

Weak acids

Acetic and other carboxylic acids ---COOH group

Carbonic acid H2CO3

Acidity of some hydrated metals:

Al(H2O)63+ Û Al(H2O)5OH2+ + H+

Buffers

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