The effects of biogeochemical processes on oceanic conductivity/salinity/ density relationships and the characterization of real seawater

49Citations
Citations of this article
78Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

As seawater circulates through the global ocean, its relative composition undergoes small variations. This results in changes to the conductivity/ salinity/density relationship, which is currently well-defined only for Standard Seawater obtained from a particular area in the North Atlantic. These changes are investigated here by analysis of laboratory experiments in which salts are added to seawater, by analysis of oceanic observations of density and composition anomalies, and by mathematical investigation using a model relating composition, conductivity, and density of arbitrary seawaters. Mathematical analysis shows that understanding and describing the effect of changes in relative composition on operational estimates of salinity using the Practical Salinity Scale 1978 and on density using an equation of state for Standard Seawater require the use of a number of different salinity variables and a family of haline contraction coefficients. These salinity variables include an absolute Salinity SAsoln, a density salinity S Adens, the reference salinity SR, and an added-mass salinity SAadd. In addition, a new salinity variable S* is defined, which represents the preformed salinity of a Standard Seawater component of real seawater to which biogeochemical processes add material. In spite of this complexity, observed correlations between different ocean biogeochemical processes allow the creation of simple formulas that can be used to convert between the different salinity and density measures, allowing for the operational reduction of routine oceanographic observations. © 2011 Author(s).

Figures

  • Fig. 1. Schematic illustrating the relationships between different salinities, densities, and conductivities used in the text. The conductivity/salinity relationship is on the left side with the scaled PSS-78 relationship shown as a gray curve. The density/salinity relationship on the right side, with the equation of state (EOS) for SSW shown as a gray curve. Salinity measures are common to both relationships. Salinities are indicated by subscripts for preformed (*), reference (R) and absolute (A) salinities, with further differentiations of the latter using superscripts for added salinity (add), density salinity (dens) and true or solution absolute salinity (soln). The notational convention for salinity variations is Sto = Sfrom+δS to from. For further information see Sect. 2.3 and Table 1.
  • Table 1. Glossary of important symbols and abbreviations.
  • Table 2. Parameters from Eq. (14) for apparent molal volumes (cm3 mol−1) of binary electrolytes for temperatures 0 ◦C to 50 ◦C. These equations are in terms of molalities c′ j = I ′/wj . Sources are: NaCl, Na2SO4, MgCl2, MgSO4 – Lo Surdo et al. (1982), NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 – Hershey et al. (1983), NaB(OH)4, B(OH)3 – Ward and Millero (1974), KCl, CaCl2 – equations fit to model output of Mao and Duan (2008), HCl, NaOH – Millero et al. (1972), with HCl refitted to raw data.
  • Table 3. Parameters from Eq. (14) continued.
  • Table 4. Parameters from Eq. (14) for apparent molal volumes (cm3 mol−1) of binary electrolytes at 25 ◦C. These equations are in terms of ionic stength I ′. Sources are NaF, NaNO3, NaBr, SrCl2 – Millero et al. (1977), Si(OH)4 – Duedall et al. (1976), CO2, O2, N2 – Watanabe and Iizuka (1985).
  • Table 5. Haline contraction coefficients for various combinations of biogeochemical processes. The first column is the composition of Standard Seawater (SSW76) with SP = 35, after Pawlowicz (2010), as well as the calculated β soln
  • Fig. 2. Comparison between TEOS-10 and LIMBETA densities and haline contraction coefficient, over the general range of seawater. (a) Differences in predicted densities. (b) Relative error in density anomaly from pure water values. (c) βR for model (thick dashed lines) and from TEOS-10 (thin lines). (d) Relative error in model βR.
  • Fig. 4. Laboratory measurements (data) and model predictions (model) for relationships between added mass δSadd∗ and density anomalies (a) δρR/ρ and (b) δρ∗/ρ for different added salts. Thick gray line shows slope βR.

References Powered by Scopus

The composition of Standard Seawater and the definition of the Reference-Composition Salinity Scale

929Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Thermodynamics of the carbon dioxide system in the oceans

867Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

The universal ratio of boron to chlorinity for the North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans

457Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

A global algorithm for estimating Absolute Salinity

123Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Water masses in the Atlantic Ocean: Characteristics and distributions

69Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Absolute salinity, "density salinity" and the reference-composition salinity scale: Present and future use in the seawater standard TEOS-10

66Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Pawlowicz, R., Wright, D. G., & Millero, F. J. (2011). The effects of biogeochemical processes on oceanic conductivity/salinity/ density relationships and the characterization of real seawater. Ocean Science, 7(3), 363–387. https://doi.org/10.5194/os-7-363-2011

Readers over time

‘11‘12‘13‘14‘15‘16‘17‘18‘19‘20‘21‘22‘23‘24‘25036912

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 22

43%

Researcher 15

29%

Professor / Associate Prof. 11

22%

Lecturer / Post doc 3

6%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Earth and Planetary Sciences 25

48%

Engineering 9

17%

Agricultural and Biological Sciences 9

17%

Environmental Science 9

17%

Article Metrics

Tooltip
Mentions
References: 1

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free
0