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Rain, Deserts, and Salt Lakes. By Allan Treiman For “Life at the Limits” Teacher Training Workshop 2005. Why does air change temperature as it rises and falls?. Pressure - Volume work, like an air conditioner.
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Rain, Deserts, and Salt Lakes By Allan Treiman For “Life at the Limits” Teacher Training Workshop 2005
Why does air change temperature as it rises and falls? • Pressure - Volume work, like an air conditioner. • Air gets cooler as it decompresses (inside AC unit), and hotter as it is compressed (outside AC unit). • From physical chemistry, an ideal gas has: ( T2 /T1 ) = ( p2 / p1 ) , >1. • This curve of T vs. P for air (without heat added) is its ‘lapse rate.’
Quick Review of Chemistry - I • In water solutions, nearly all elements are as charged ions. • Positive charge (Na+, H+, Ca2+, Al3+) = cations • Negative charge (Cl-, SO42-, OH-) = anions • Mass is conserved – atoms don’t vanish or appear from nowhere. • Charge is conserved – charge doesn’t vanish or appear from nowhere. • The sum of charges on all ions is zero.
Quick Review of Chemistry. II • Ions react among themselves, gas, solids. • H+ + OH - H2O – water • As concentration of H+ goes up, OH - goes down: equilibrium [H+][OH -] = 10-14 (25°C). • In pure water, [H+]=[OH -], so [H+] = 10-7 . • This is ‘neutral’, pH=7. • pH is –logarithm(base10) of H+ concentration • High H+ (like [H+] = 10-3) is acid (pH = 3). • High OH -(like [H+] = 10-9) is alkaline (pH = 9).
Quick Review of Chemistry III • Gas - Carbon dioxide • CO2 (gas) CO2 (dissolved) • CO2 (gas) + H2O H2CO3 (carbonic acid) • [H2CO3] / [CO2] = a constant (10-1.47) • H2CO3 H+ + HCO3- (now acidic!) and • [H+][HCO3 -] / [H2CO3] = a constant (10-6.35) • HCO3- H+ + CO32- . • Solids – • Ca++ + CO32- CaCO3 (calcite, tufa)
Sierra Nevada Spring Water mg/kg = ppm SiO2 24.6 Ca2+ 10.4 Mg2+ 1.70 Na+ 5.95 K+ 1.57 HCO3- 54.6 SO42- 2.38 Cl- 1.06 pH 6.8 Where do elements come from? Atmosphere CO2 makes carbonic acid, helps dissolve solids Rock (granite) – Si, Ca, Mg, Na, K, SO42- Atmospheric dust – these plus Na, Cl, SO42- from sea spray. Salt Lakes: From Spring Water
Gaylussite - at Mono Lake Na2Ca(CO3)•2.5H2O Natron Na2CO3•10H2O Aphthitalite (K,Na)3Na(SO4)2 Halite NaCl - at 4-Mile pH high - always very alkaline Calculated Evaporation of SN Water
Evaporate this water! What’s left? • Ca, Mg, Si precipitate as minerals • Na+, Cl-, SO42- become concentrated • HCO3- & CO32- become concentrated too, • AND, they react with H+ in the water to make CO2, which leaves into the air. HCO3- +H+ H2O + CO2(gas). • This reaction consumes H+, making the water less acid == more alkaline! • The result – an alkaline brine rich in sodium, chloride and carbonate !!