Calculate equilibrium dissolved oxygen at 19.8 Celsius

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the equilibrium dissolved oxygen concentration at different temperatures, specifically 19.8°C and 7°C, using principles from gas solubility and Henry's law. The initial calculations for 19.8°C yield a K value of 5.982x10^-4, leading to an equilibrium concentration of 1.255x10^-4 atm for O2 (aq). For 7°C, the Van 't Hoff equation is suggested to adjust Henry's coefficient, resulting in a calculated concentration of 3.59x10^-4 M. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding the definitions and units of K in relation to gas solubility. Overall, the methodical approach to solving the problem is highlighted, demonstrating the application of thermodynamic principles.
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Homework Statement


1. Calculate the equilibrium dissolved oxygen concentration for each temperature if PO2 = 21% (this means that if atmospheric pressure is 1 atm then O2 pressure is 21% of that)

Homework Equations


K19.8/RT = Kp
PV=nRT

The Attempt at a Solution


K19.8/RT = Kp

K19.8 = 1.475x10-3

(1.457x10-3)/(8.314x10-3)(273.15+19.8) = Kp

5.982x10-4 = Kp

Kp = (O2 (aq)) / (O2 (g))

5.982x10-4 = (O2 (aq)) / (0.21)

1.256x104 atm = O2 (aq)

ICE table:

__________________O2 (g)_______O2 (aq)

Initial______________0.21_________0

Change___________0.21 -x_______+x

Equilibrium_______0.21 -x_______+x5.982x10-4 = x/(0.21 – x)

5.982x10-4 (0.21 – x) = x

1.256x10-4 - 5.982x10-4 x = x

1.256x10-4 = x + 5.982x10-4 x

1.256x10-4 = 1.000598x

1.255x10-4 = x
PV = nRT

n/V = P/RT

M = 1.255x10-4 atm/(0.0821atm L/mol K) (273.15 + 19.8)

M = 5.218x10-6

This doesn't look right to me but I'm not sure what else to try. Thanks for the help!
 
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No idea what is what of what, can you please post whole question and all information given?
 
Ok I'll simplify it a bit. All I need is how to calculate the equilibrium dissolved oxygen concentration for 7 degrees celsius if PO2 = 21% (this means that if atmospheric pressure is 1 atm then O2 pressure is 21% of that). K was previously found to be 1.813x10-3 at 7 degrees celsius. My professor is asking this so there must be a way! My head hurts. The chemical equation is O2 (g) = O2 (aq), that's it.
 
What is K specifically? How is it defined?

When it comes to solubility of gases, we typically describe it with Henry's law, not with a typical equilibrium constant. These are perfectly equivalent, but you need to be sure how K is defined and what units it has.
 
K is for concentration. So if I use Henry's law, Henry's coefficient for O2 at 25 degrees celsius is 1.3×10−3 mol L/atm. How can I adjust Henry's coefficient to work at 7 degrees celsius? Thanks for the help!
 
spooky01 said:
K is for concentration.

Huh? No idea what you just said.

spooky01 said:
How can I adjust Henry's coefficient to work at 7 degrees celsius?

Van 't Hoff equation comes to mind. Yes, it requires more data. But that's a general case - every approach will require some additional information that you have not listed so far.
 
Got it. Henry's law worked!

temp 7°C

ln(kHT/kH25) = (ΔH°/R)(1/298 – 1/T)

ln(kHT/1.26x10-3mol/Latm)=(-11.71kJ/mol/8.314x10-3kJ/molK)(1/298–1/280)

ln(kHT/1.26x10-3mol/Latm) = 3.04x10-1

e ln(kHT/1.26x10-3mol/Latm) = e3.04x10-1

kHT/1.26x10-3mol/L atm = 1.36

kHT = 1.71x10-3 mol/L atmC = (1.71x10-3 mol/L atm) 0.21atm

C = 3.59x10-4 M
 

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