How many ppm of O2 does H2O2 add to water?

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SUMMARY

This discussion focuses on calculating the amount of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) required to increase the dissolved oxygen (O2) concentration in water to 10 ppm. The decomposition of H2O2 produces O2, with a yield of approximately 47%. To achieve 10 ppm of O2 in one liter of water, approximately 0.33 grams of a 6% H2O2 solution is needed. Additionally, methods to remove existing dissolved gases from water, such as boiling, are discussed to ensure accurate measurements.

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  • Understanding of stoichiometry and chemical reactions
  • Familiarity with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and its properties
  • Knowledge of dissolved oxygen concentration measurements
  • Basic chemistry concepts, including molar mass calculations
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  • Research the kinetics of hydrogen peroxide decomposition in aqueous solutions
  • Learn about methods to measure dissolved oxygen levels accurately
  • Explore the use of catalysts in accelerating chemical reactions, specifically for H2O2
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Chemists, environmental scientists, and anyone involved in water treatment or oxygenation processes will benefit from this discussion.

bland
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TL;DR
Trying to work out how to raise the oxygen ppm of a litre of water by a measure quantity using hydrogen peroxide.
I'm starting with a litre of distilled water with a dissolved oxygen content of zero ppm, and I wish to raise the ppm of the dissolved O2 to 10ppm or 10mg/L using a 6% solution of H2O2. That is 10 extra molecules of oxygen in a litre!

I've had no luck looking for through web based conversion calculators and other technical papers. So I am reaching out here hoping that someone can explain the correct way to calculate this.

thanks in advance.
 
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bland said:
That is 10 extra molecules of oxygen in a litre!
No, 10 ppm doesn't mean 10 molecules.

Technically adding hydrogen peroxide you don't add oxygen, oxygen will be produced when the hydrogen peroxide decomposes - which takes time. Kinetics of the process will be a nightmare to describe, as it depends on other dissolved substances catalyzing the reaction.

What you can do is to calculate amount of oxygen that will be produced from the introduced hydrogen peroxide (rather simple stoichiometry), that will help you estimate maximum possible concentration of oxygen after the decomposition (with assumption none of the produced oxygen runs out).
 
I wanted to work this out just for fun as I am not a real chemist. Molar Mass of hydrogen peroxide is 34, and of oxygen 32. The reaction is 2 H2O2 gives O2. So 68g of hydrogen peroxide give 32g of oxygen, a yield of 32/68 x100=47%.
To provide 10ppm in 1 litre of water will require 1000 x 10^-5 = 10^-2 g of oxygen. This will require (10^-2) x 100/47 = 0.02 g of hydrogen peroxide. Using a 6% solution will require 0.02 x 100 / 6 = 0.33g of hydrogen peroxide.
As this is a very small amount to measure, maybe dilute the hydrogen peroxide a further ten times before measuring the dose.
 
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tech99 said:
This will require (10^-2) x 100/47 = 0.02 g of hydrogen peroxide.
OK
tech99 said:
Using a 6% solution will require 0.02 x 100 / 6 = 0.33g of hydrogen peroxide.
Of the hydrogen peroxide solution, to be precise :smile:
 
tech99 said:
I wanted to work this out just for fun as I am not a real chemist. Molar Mass of hydrogen peroxide is 34, and of oxygen 32. The reaction is 2 H2O2 gives O2. So 68g of hydrogen peroxide give 32g of oxygen, a yield of 32/68 x100=47%.
To provide 10ppm in 1 litre of water will require 1000 x 10^-5 = 10^-2 g of oxygen. This will require (10^-2) x 100/47 = 0.02 g of hydrogen peroxide. Using a 6% solution will require 0.02 x 100 / 6 = 0.33g of hydrogen peroxide.
As this is a very small amount to measure, maybe dilute the hydrogen peroxide a further ten times before measuring the dose.

Okie dokie that is some decent ball park figures to work with, it is indeed a small quantity. thanks.
 
If your water is open to the atmosphere, then a small amount of air (mostly nitrogen, but about 19% oxygen) will dissolve in the water. To remove it, you will need to boil the water. That also makes it sterile (until the air re-dissolves into the liquid). For fun, buy Clean&Clear or Oxysept used for dis-infecting contact lenses. C&C uses a platinum disc (catalyst) to decompose the H2O2 to water. Oxysept uses catalase, an enzyme, with a pink indicator to decompose the H2O2 to water. You can see the Oxygen bubbling out almost immediately. Process to convert all H2O2 to plain water requires 6 hours. I am a chemist and a contact lens wearer.
 
I came.across a headline and read some of the article, so I was curious. Scientists discover that gold is a 'reactive metal' by accidentally creating a new material in the lab https://www.earth.com/news/discovery-that-gold-is-reactive-metal-by-creating-gold-hydride-in-lab-experiment/ From SLAC - A SLAC team unexpectedly formed gold hydride in an experiment that could pave the way for studying materials under extreme conditions like those found inside certain planets and stars undergoing...

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