Abstract

The concentration of dissolved inorganic carbon in the oceans at depths of a few meters to thousands of meters is a critical parameter for understanding global warming. The concentration is both pH dependent and depth dependent. Current analysis that employs pH meters must account for several other parameters, such as salinity, temperature, pressure, and the dissolved carbon’s form, carbon dioxide, bicarbonate, or carbonate. Recently, Raman spectroscopy has been used to measure these forms directly in water at ~1000 ppm, which is unfortunately insufficient for typical ocean concentrations, such as ~115 ppm bicarbonate near the surface. Here, we employed a simple multi-pass optical system, a flat mirror to reflect the laser back through the sample, and a concave mirror opposite the entrance slit that effectively doubled the laser power and the collected Raman photons, respectively. This multi-pass optical Raman system with a 1.5 W, 532 nm laser was used to measure 30 ppm bicarbonate in water that contained 2650 ppm sulfate to simulate ocean water, a bicarbonate concentration well below that near the ocean surface. Furthermore, spectral analysis employed the bicarbonate C=O symmetric stretch at 1360 cm−1 instead of the C–OH stretch at 1015 cm−1 to avoid the intense, overlapping sulfate SO4 symmetric stretch at 985 cm−1. The calculated standard deviation of ~5 ppm for the described approach suggests that accurate measurement of bicarbonate in situ is possible, which has been, heretofore, either calculated based on pH or measured in a lab.

Highlights

  • The measurement of dissolved inorganic carbon in the ocean has taken on considerable importance in view of the increasing emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere which, when sequestered, acidifies the oceans [1,2], negatively affecting coral reefs [3], crustaceans [4], and many other carbonate-containing aquatic life forms

  • The system was used to measure ~1600 ppm CO2 ppm gas phase extracted from a liquid water sample in 3 min [14]. Based on these previous systems we developed a Raman system that used a high powered 1.5 W, 532 nm laser and a simple multiplicative optical system and measured

  • We present measurements of HCO3 − in water containing 2650 ppm sulfate to simulate the spectral challenge of performing measurements in the ocean

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Summary

Introduction

The measurement of dissolved inorganic carbon in the ocean has taken on considerable importance in view of the increasing emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere which, when sequestered, acidifies the oceans [1,2], negatively affecting coral reefs [3], crustaceans [4], and many other carbonate-containing aquatic life forms In light of these deleterious effects, a controversial proposal [5] suggests that pumping CO2 into the oceans below. 3000 m [6], where it is denser than water, could remove substantial amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere, alleviating global warming [7].

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