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Seawater salinity salinometers

Salinometer The device used to measure the salinity of seawater by deterrmning its electrical conductivity. [Pg.887]

However, salinity values are easily obtained with a salinometer (which measures electrical conductivity and is appropriately calibrated with standard solutions and adjusted to account for T effects). The salinity of seawater increases if the loss of H2O (evaporation, formation of ice) exceeds the atmospheric input (rain plus rivers), and diminishes near deltas and lagoons. Salinity and temperature concur antithetically to define the density of seawater. The surface temperature of the sea reflects primarily the latitude and season of sampling. The vertical thermal profile defines three zones surface (10-100 m), where T is practically constant thermoclinal (100-1000 m), where T diminishes regularly with depth and abyssal... [Pg.601]

Salinity is presently determined by measuring the conductance of seawater by using a salinometer. The modem definition of salinity uses the practical salinity scale, which replaces the chlorinity-salinity relationship with a definition based on a conductivity ratio (Millero, 1996). A seawater sample of salinity S= 35 has a conductivity equal to that of a KCl solution containing a mass of 32.435 6g KCl in 1 kg of solution at 15 °C and 1 atm pressure. No units are necessary on the practical salinity scale however, in practice, one often sees parts per thousand, ppt, or the abbreviation psu. New salinometers using this method are capable of extremely high precision so that the salinity ratio can be determined to 1 part in 40 000. At a typical salinity near 35 this procedure enables salinities to be determined to an accuracy of 35.000 0.001. This is much better than most chemical titrations, which, at best, achieve routine accuracy of 0.5 parts per thousand. [Pg.7]

In the early 1960s, bench salinometers were developed that allowed measurement of the electrical conductivity of a seawater sample relative to that of a standard with high precision. Cox et al. (1967) had related chlorinity and conductivity ratios of seawater to standard seawater at temperatures higher than 10 °C and tabulated their results (UNESCO, 1966). Following their work, the responsible international oceanographic organizations adopted a redefinition of salinity (Wooster et al, 1969). Firstly, it was assumed that salinity was proportional to chlorinity, to be consistent with the assumed constancy of the ionic composition. The constant was chosen so that for 5=35 %o, both the Knudsen formula (3-1) and the new relationship... [Pg.43]


See other pages where Seawater salinity salinometers is mentioned: [Pg.38]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.413]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.61]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.7 ]




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