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Aquatic Chemistry 367 Civil and Environmental Engineering Meeting time: MWF 11:00-11:50am Meeting room: Abbott Auditorium in Pancoe Pavillion Instructor: Jean-Francois Gaillard, jf- gaillard@northwestern.edu Grader: Amy Dahl, a-dahl@northwestern.edu
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Logistics Introductions http://www.civil.northwestern.edu/ehe/cour ses/ce-367/ce-367.htmhttp://www.civil.northwestern.edu/ehe/cour ses/ce-367/ce-367.htm Keep on top of the homework!
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Why study Aquatic Chemistry?
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Required for life Pollution transport almost always requires water Many environmentally relevant reactions occur in water Critical for controlling cycling of many elements –Nutrients –Toxins –Oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide – atmosphere control
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Applications of aquatic chemistry: Arsenic Chromium Mercury Acid mine drainage Global warming
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What is water? Universal Solvent Required for life Molecular structure Hydrogen bonding: water clustering Anomalous behavior compared to other liquids
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Sediments e.g.,amorphous or crystalline solids Soluble SpeciesSuspended Particles Small Complexes e.g.,Inorganic Metal Complex Me(CO 3 ) n y- Complexes with Macromolecules e.g., Fulvic Acid Particles Colloidal, aggregates Oxides (Al, Fe, Mn, Si) Adsorption: surface complexation Co-entrainment Living Organisms Intra/extra-cellular Oligoelements Toxicity Defense Mechanisms Hydrated Ion Me n+ (H 2 O) n Sediments! e.g.,amorphous or crystalline solids (precipitates and mineral formation) Soluble SpeciesSuspended Particles Small Complexes e.g.,Inorganic Metal Complex Me(CO 3 ) n y- Complexes with Macromolecules e.g., Fulvic Acid Particles Colloidal, aggregates Oxides (Al, Fe, Mn, Si) Adsorption: surface complexation Co-entrainment Living Organisms Intra/extra-cellular Oligoelements Toxicity Defense Mechanisms Hydrated Ion Me n+ (H 2 O) n Hydrated Ion Me n+ (H 2 O) n What is in water?
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Dissolved ions: –Major Cations (Ca, Na, Mg, K, Fe) –Trace elements (Zn, Cr, Cu, Cd) –Anions (F, Cl, nitrate, sulfate) –Complexes (non-charged) –Organic molecules (humic substances) http://www.ar.wroc.pl/~weber/kwasy2.htm Particulate –Organic matter –Clays –Oxides
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Chemical Reactions Acid-base chemistry Coordination chemistry Precipitation and dissolution Redox reactions
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Kinetic approach Does not assume equilibrium has been reached Use a rate constant, k, to describe the rate of formation of products or consumption of reactants
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Thermodynamic explanation Assumes equilibrium of a reaction is reached Simplifies solving mathematical expressions of chemical systems Use an equilibrium constant, K, to describe ratio of products to reactants
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