Spectrophotometric Measurement of Calcium Carbonate Saturation States in Seawater

Regina A. Easley, Mark C. Patsavas, Robert H. Byrne, Xuewu Liu, Richard A. Feely, Jeremy T. Mathis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Measurements of ocean pH and carbonate ion concentrations in the North Pacific and Arctic Oceans were used to determine calcium carbonate saturation states (Ω CaCO 3 ) from spectrophotometric methods alone. Total carbonate ion concentrations, [CO 3 2– ] T , were for the first time at sea directly measured using Pb(II) UV absorbance spectra. The basis of the method is given by the following: where CO 3 β 1 is the PbCO 3 0 formation constant, e i are molar absorptivity ratios, and R = 250 A / 234 A (ratio of absorbances measured at 250 and 234 nm). On the basis of shipboard and laboratory Pb(II) data and complementary carbon-system measurements, the experimental parameters were determined to be (25 °C) the following: The resulting mean difference between the shipboard spectrophotometric and conventional determinations of [CO 3 2– ] T was ±2.03 μmol kg –1 . The shipboard analytical precision of the Pb(II) method was ∼1.71 μmol kg –1 (2.28%). Spectrophotometric [CO 3 2– ] T and pH T were then combined to calculate Ω CaCO 3 . For the case of aragonite, 95% of the spectrophotometric aragonite saturation states (Ω Aspec ) were within ±0.06 of the conventionally calculated values (Ω Acalc ) when 0.5 ≤ Ω A ≤ 2.0. When Ω A > 2.0, 95% of the Ω Aspec values were within ±0.18 of Ω Acalc . Our shipboard experience indicates that spectrophotometric determinations of [CO 3 2– ] T and Ω CaCO 3 are straightforward, fast, and precise. The method yields high-quality measurements of two important, rapidly changing aspects of ocean chemistry and offers capabilities suitable for long-term automated in situ monitoring.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalEnvironmental Science Technology
Volume47
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2013

Keywords

  • Saturation
  • Seawater
  • Absorption
  • Ions
  • Inorganic carbon compounds

Disciplines

  • Life Sciences

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