[PDF] [PDF] Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

Saltwater properties were computed at the standard pressure of 0 101325 MPa and stan- dard absolute salinity, SA = 35 16504 ±0 007 g/kg The results for density 



Previous PDF Next PDF





[PDF] Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

Saltwater properties were computed at the standard pressure of 0 101325 MPa and stan- dard absolute salinity, SA = 35 16504 ±0 007 g/kg The results for density 



[PDF] Fresh Water and Seawater Properties - ITTC

Saltwater properties were computed at the standard pressure of 0 101325 MPa and stand- ard absolute salinity, SA = 35 16504 ±0 007 g/kg The results for density 



[PDF] 1 Chpt 3: Properties of Water and Seawater James W Murray (9/30

30 sept 2004 · anions and cations When a salt dissolves in solution, water molecules surround each ion Conductivity is an important property of seawater



[PDF] Physical Properties of Seawater, Including its Three Phases - EOLSS

Institute of Water Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia Keywords: seawater, physical properties, temperature, salinity, pressure, density,



[PDF] The Properties of Seawater - Jones & Bartlett Learning

What exactly are the chemical and physical properties of water generally and seawater specifically? How variable are these properties over time and space?



[PDF] \ Physical Properties of Sea Water The properties of pure water are

Furthermore, the presence of dissolved salts adds a few new characteristicsto sea water, such as osmotic pressure General surveys of the physical properties of 



[PDF] Thermophysical properties of seawater - MIT

salinity common in thermal and/or reverse osmosis seawater desalination applications Keywords: Seawater; Thermophysical properties; Density; Specific heat; 



Salt water vs Fresh water - Royal Society of New Zealand

We are learning about the different properties of salt and fresh water Success Criteria ✓ I can draw and explain what happens when saltwater and freshwater  



[PDF] Physical Properties of Seawater

seawater, these molecular effects are combined with the influence in the ocean to water vapor in the atmosphere seawater properties such as temperature,

[PDF] salut comment vas tu in english

[PDF] salut comment vas tu reply

[PDF] salut les copains answers

[PDF] salut les copains chapitre 1 worksheet answers

[PDF] same access as methods to private and protected data of a class

[PDF] samoa public holidays 2020

[PDF] sample 1099

[PDF] sample 1099 form

[PDF] sample 9th grade english syllabus

[PDF] sample address in toronto canada

[PDF] sample angular projects for beginners

[PDF] sample annotated bibliography apa

[PDF] sample annotated bibliography apa pdf

[PDF] sample apa annotated bibliography

[PDF] sample apa format abstract page

ITTC - Recommended

Procedures

7.5-02

-01-03 Page

1 of 45

Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

Effective Date

2011 Revision

02

Updated / Edited by Approved

26
th ITTC

Specialist Committee

on Uncertainty Analysis 26
th ITTC

Date 04/2011 Date 09/2011

FRESH WATER AND SEAWATER

PROPERTIES ........................................ 2

1. INTRODUCTION

................................. 2

2. FRESH WATER PROPERTIES ......... 2

2.1 Uncertainty estimates for fresh water

properties ............................................ 6

2.1.1 Example uncertainty calculation of

fresh water properties ................... 6

3. SALTWATER PROPERTIES ............. 7

3.1 Properties at standard salinity and varying temperature. ......................... 7

3.2 Properties at 15 °C and varying salinity ................................................. 7

3.3 Uncertainty estimates for saltwater

properties ......................................... 12

3.3.1 Example uncertainty calculation of saltwater properties .................... 12

4. SUMMARY .......................................... 13

5. REFERENCES .................................... 14

6.

LIST OF SYMBOLS ........................... 15

APPENDIX A: FRESH WATER

PROPERTIES 0.1 TO 50 °C IN 0.1 °C

INCREMENTS .................................... 16

APPENDIX B: STANDAR

D SALTWATER

PROPERTIES 0.1 TO 50

°C IN 0.1 °C

INCREMENTS .................................... 31

ITTC - Recommended

Procedures

7.5-02

-01-03 Page

2 of 45

Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

Effective Date

2011 Revision

02

Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

1.

INTRODUCTION

The international standard for the properties

of fresh water and seawater are specified by the

International Association for the Properties of

Water and Steam (IAPWS). The properties

available include density, viscosity, thermal conductivity, index of refraction, vapour pres- sure, speed of sound, and surface tension.

Those of liquid water are described in IAPWS

(2008a). For this procedure, only the following properties are provided: density, absolute vis- cosity, kinematic viscosity, and vapour pres- sure.

In general, the water properties are a func-

tion of temperature (t), pressure (p), and abso- lute salinity (S A ). For fresh water, S A = 0.0. In this procedure, data are provided at standard pressure of 0.101325 MPa and as a function of temperature. The temperature scale is the In- ternational Temperature Scale 1990 (ITS-90).

At non

-standard conditions, water properties should be computed from computer codes de- scribed in the following paragraphs.

The values

for fresh water were computed via a computer code from NIST (National Insti- tute of Standards and Technology), the Na- tional Metrology Institute (NMI) for the United

States. Harvey, et al. (2008) is the manual for

the computer code.

The sensitivity coefficients

are also provided so that the uncertainty in the property may be computed from the uncer- tainty in temperature per the 25 th ITTC proce-dure on uncertainty analysis. The uncertainties in the IAPWS equations are also provided.

IAWPS (2008b) is the new international

standard for seawater properties. The new stan- dard for seawater has been developed by a group at the United Nations and UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and

Cultural Organization) and several other inter-

national organizations. The latest standard for seawater prope rties is the International Ther- modynamic Equation Of Seawater: 2010 (TEOS-10). IOC, et al. (2010) is the manual for the computer code.

The code currently

calc u- lates thermodynamic properties such as density and vapour pressure. IAWPS (2010) has certi- fied a research need for transport properties such as viscosity. In the meantime for this pro- cedure, viscosity and vapour pressure recom- mended by Sharqawy, et al. (2010) is adopted.

Another source of seawater properties is the

SIA (Sea-Ice-Air) library described by Feistel,

et al. (2010) and Wright, et al. (2010). 2.

FRESH WATER PROPERTIES

Fresh water properties were computed at the

standard pressure of 0.101325 MPa. The results for density, absolute viscosity, kin ematic vis- cosity, vapour pressure, and their sensitivity coefficients are shown in the following graph i- cally in Figure 1 through Figure 4 as S A = 0.0.

The properties were produced from

the NIST code of Harvey, et al. (2008) from 0.1 to 50 °C in 0.1

C steps, and the sensitivity coefficients

were computed by a central finite-differencing method from ISO (2008) given by:

ITTC - Recommended

Procedures

7.5-02

-01-03 Page

5 of 45

Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

Effective Date

2011 Revision

02 Temp t Density /t Viscosity /t = / /t Pressure p v p v /t (°C) (kg/m 3 ) (kg/m 3

°C) (Pas) (Pas/°C) (m

2 /s) (m 2 /s°C) (MPa) (MPa/°C)

10 999.7025 -0.08791 0.001306 -3.760E-05 1.3063E-06 -3.749E-08 1.2282E-03 8.230E-05

11 999.6079 -0.10112 0.001269 -3.591E-05 1.2697E-06 -3.580E-08 1.3130E-03 8.728E-05

12 999.5004 -0.11399 0.001234 -3.433E-05 1.2347E-06 -3.420E-08 1.4028E-03 9.252E-05

13 999.3801 -0.12653 0.001200 -3.284E-05 1.2012E-06 -3.271E-08 1.4981E-03 9.802E-05

14 999.2474 -0.13877 0.001168 -3.144E-05 1.1692E-06 -3.130E-08 1.5990E-03 1.038E-04

15 999.1026 -0.15071 0.001138 -3.012E-05 1.1386E-06 -2.997E-08 1.7058E-03 1.099E-04

16 998.9461 -0.16237 0.001108 -2.887E-05 1.1093E-06 -2.872E-08 1.8188E-03 1.162E-04

17 998.7780 -0.17376 0.001080 -2.769E-05 1.0811E-06 -2.754E-08 1.9384E-03 1.229E-04

18 998.5986 -0.18489 0.001053 -2.658E-05 1.0542E-06 -2.642E-08 2.0647E-03 1.299E-04

19 998.4083 -0.19578 0.001027 -2.553E-05 1.0283E-06 -2.537E-08 2.1983E-03 1.372E-04

20 998.2072 -0.20644 0.001002 -2.453E-05 1.0034E-06 -2.437E-08 2.3393E-03 1.449E-04

21 997.9955 -0.21687 0.000978 -2.359E-05 9.7950E-07 -2.343E-08 2.4882E-03 1.530E-04

22 997.7735 -0.22708 0.000954 -2.270E-05 9.5653E-07 -2.253E-08 2.6453E-03 1.614E-04

23 997.5414 -0.23709 0.000932 -2.185E-05 9.3442E-07 -2.168E-08 2.8111E-03 1.702E-04

24 997.2994 -0.24691 0.000911 -2.104E-05 9.1315E-07 -2.088E-08 2.9858E-03 1.794E-04

25 997.0476 -0.25653 0.000890 -2.028E-05 8.9266E-07 -2.011E-08 3.1699E-03 1.890E-04

26 996.7864 -0.26597 0.000870 -1.955E-05 8.7291E-07 -1.938E-08 3.3639E-03 1.990E-04

27 996.5158 -0.27524 0.000851 -1.886E-05 8.5388E-07 -1.869E-08 3.5681E-03 2.095E-04

28 996.2360 -0.28434 0.000832 -1.820E-05 8.3552E-07 -1.803E-08 3.7831E-03 2.205E-04

29 995.9471 -0.29327 0.000814 -1.757E-05 8.1781E-07 -1.740E-08 4.0092E-03 2.319E-04

30 995.6495 -0.30206 0.000797 -1.697E-05 8.0071E-07 -1.681E-08 4.2470E-03 2.438E-04

31 995.3431 -0.31069 0.000781 -1.640E-05 7.8419E-07 -1.624E-08 4.4969E-03 2.562E-04

32 995.0281 -0.31918 0.000764 -1.586E-05 7.6823E-07 -1.569E-08 4.7596E-03 2.692E-04

33 994.7048 -0.32753 0.000749 -1.534E-05 7.5280E-07 -1.517E-08 5.0354E-03 2.826E-04

34 994.3731 -0.33574 0.000734 -1.484E-05 7.3788E-07 -1.467E-08 5.3251E-03 2.967E-04

35 994.0333 -0.34383 0.000719 -1.436E-05 7.2344E-07 -1.420E-08 5.6290E-03 3.113E-04

36 993.6855 -0.35179 0.000705 -1.391E-05 7.0947E-07 -1.375E-08 5.9479E-03 3.265E-04

37 993.3298 -0.35963 0.000691 -1.347E-05 6.9595E-07 -1.331E-08 6.2823E-03 3.424E-04

38 992.9663 -0.36736 0.000678 -1.305E-05 6.8285E-07 -1.289E-08 6.6328E-03 3.588E-04

39 992.5951 -0.37497 0.000665 -1.265E-05 6.7015E-07 -1.250E-08 7.0002E-03 3.759E-04

40 992.2164 -0.38248 0.000653 -1.227E-05 6.5785E-07 -1.211E-08 7.3849E-03 3.937E-04

Table 1 : Fresh water properties at 1 °C increment

ITTC - Recommended

Procedures

7.5-02

-01-03 Page

6 of 45

Fresh Water and Seawater Properties

Effective Date

2011 Revision

02 )2/()(/ 11 txxdtdx ii (1) where x is a water property, t is the temperature

ǻt = 0.1 °C.

Water property numerical values at 1 °C in-

crement from 10 to 40 °C are listed in Table 1.

A more detailed list at 0.1 °C increments from

0.1 to 50 °C is located in

Appendix A.

2.1

Uncertainty estimates for fresh water properties

The uncertainties in the IAWPS equations

are summarized in

Table 2 for an expanded un-

certainty with a coverage factor o f 2. For den- sity and viscosity, the uncertainties are from

IAWPS (2008a). The uncertainty in vapour

pressure is from Harvey, et al. (2008) Figure B-

4. The value of ±0.02 % is actually the maxi-

mum value over the ambient temperature range and is recommended for simplicity.

Property Symbol U

95
Units

Density 1 ppm

Viscosity 1 %

Vapour Pressure p

v

0.02 %

Table 2: Uncertainty in water properties at 95 %

confidence limit [ppm: parts per million (0.0001 %)]

The combined uncertainty then includes

both the influence of the uncertainty in tem- perature and the uncertainty in the IAWPS equations. The combin ed expanded uncertainty is then 2 ,2 c ttxx

UcUU (2)

where U x is the uncertainty in the water prop- erty equation from

Table 2, U

t the uncertainty in temperature, and c x,t = t the sensitivity coefficient from

Table 1 or Appendix A. The

uncertainty in temperature should include both

Type A and Type B uncertainty estimates from

ISO (2008).

2.1.1

Example uncertainty calculation of fresh

water properties

From the previous

section, the following are specific examples of fresh water properties at 20 °C. For U t

±1.0 °C:

Density:

998.21 ±0.21 kg/m

3quotesdbs_dbs17.pdfusesText_23