|
Sponsored in part by: |
|
| Specific Gravity: Oh How
Complicated!
Welcome to the surprisingly complicated world of specific gravity! One question that every marine aquarist faces is the amount of salt to add to the tank. Most beginning texts choose to describe the salinity in terms of specific gravity, and go on to relate how one measures it with a hydrometer. While not nearly as precise as measuring salinity with a conductivity probe or a refractometer, hydrometers are chosen by many because they are inexpensive and easy to use. For many aquarium purposes, they are perfectly adequate. Unfortunately, measurements of specific gravity are far more complicated than most hobbyists recognize. Additionally, there has been a great deal of misinformation provided about how salinity relates to specific gravity and hydrometer readings, and how such values vary with temperature. This article will endeavor to make these relationships clear.
What is specific gravity? Specific gravity is defined as the ratio of the density of a liquid compared to the density of pure water. Since the density of pure water varies with temperature, one needs to specify the temperature of the pure water to usefully define specific gravity. For many scientific endeavors (such as mineralogy), the temperature standard chosen is 3.98 °C (39.2 °F; defined as the temperature of maximum density of pure water). At that temperature, the density of pure water is 1.0000 g/cm3. If this is the standard chosen, it is easy to see that the specific gravity is just the density of the sample at 3.98 °C when measured in g/cm3 (without any units since specific gravity is a unitless measure).
How Do Standard Hydrometers Measure Specific Gravity? Standard hydrometers work on Archimedes Principle. This principle states that the weight of a hydrometer (or other object, like an iceberg or a ship) equals the weight of the fluid that it displaces. Consequently, the hydrometer will sink until it displaces its own weight. When it is put into solutions of different densities, it floats higher or lower, until it just displaces its own weight. In denser fluids it floats higher (displacing less fluid) and in less dense fluids it floats lower. In essence, this principle is a reflection of the fact that the gravitational potential energy of the system is minimized when the hydrometer just displaces its own weight. Any different displacement puts forces on the water and hydrometer that cause them to move toward the optimal position.
Do Ion Imbalances Impact Specific Gravity? One question often asked is whether changes in various ions impact specific gravity. The answer is that, to a hobbyist using a normal salt mix, they do not. To get a ballpark understanding of this effect, it is reasonable to assume that all ions contribute to specific gravity in an amount proportional to their weight percentage in seawater. For example, I looked up the specific gravity of 15 different inorganic salts at the same "salinity" (100 ppt at 20 °C). All were very similar, with less than a factor of two difference between the highest (zinc sulfate, specific gravity = 1.1091 g/cm3) and the lowest (lithium chloride; specific gravity = 1.0579). In a sense, the more of any ion that is present regardless of chemical nature, the larger is the effect on specific gravity. Since thats exactly what salinity is (the weight of solids in the water), it is unlikely that any normal ion variation seen by marine aquarists will unduly skew specific gravity measurements. Since the top 4 ions in seawater (Na+, Mg++, Cl-, SO4--) comprise 97 weight percent of the total, any changes in other ions will have no significant impact on specific gravity. What about changes in these top four ions? Lets take an extreme case where the salt consists of nothing but sodium chloride. It turns out that a 37 ppt solution of sodium chloride has the same specific gravity as S = 35 seawater. Thus, one can see that even big changes in the ionic balance result in fairly small changes in the relationship between specific gravity and salinity. For these reasons, it is safe for most aquarists to ignore any impact that differences in the ionic constituents would have on the relationship between specific gravity and salinity. Of course, if one has a grossly inaccurate seawater mix (consisting of just potassium bromide or magnesium sulfate, for example) then the relationship between specific gravity and salinity that is assumed for seawater will be broken. A pure potassium bromide solution with the same specific gravity as natural seawater (S = 35), for example, has a "salinity" of about 36 ppt. A similar pure magnesium sulfate solution has a "salinity" of only 26 ppt.
Temperature of the Standard Unfortunately, the world of specific gravity is not as simple as described above. Different fields have apparently chosen different standard temperatures. In addition to the 3.98 °C standard, others include 20 ° C (68 °F) and 60 °F (15.6 °C). A quick look through several laboratory supply catalogs shows many examples of hydrometers using each of these two, and a few odd ones thrown in for good measure (such as 102 °F for milk). Most authors writing about marine aquaria assume that people are using the 60 °F standard, but in reality many aquarists are not, and in some cases they dont even know what they are using. Some hobby hydrometers use other standards, with 77 °F being quite popular (used by Tropic Marin, for example).
Unfortunately, it has been my experience that many aquarists quoting a specific gravity measurement for their tanks do not know what standard is being used by their hydrometer. Most quality lab hydrometers will have the standard used written on them or their supporting documents. Some hobby hydrometers, however, make no mention of the standard used. Note that there is NO "correction" table that can convert readings at temperatures other than the standard temperature unless you know the standard temperature. If you dont know it, using such a table will not give accurate values, and may give a value farther from the truth than the uncorrected reading.
Temperature of the Sample As if the confusion about the temperature of the standard were not enough, the temperature of the sample is also a variable. Many quality lab hydrometers also have the expected sample temperature indicated directly on them. This is referred to as the "reference" temperature. In a great many cases (though not all), the standard temperature and the reference temperature are the same: either 60 °F or 20 °C. This is often written as "60 °F/60 °F", though it is sometimes written simply as "Temperature of Standardization: 60 °F". If a hydrometer is used at the reference temperature, no special corrections are necessary (though the answer one gets will depend a bit on the standard temperature chosen by the manufacturer as described above). Why does the temperature of the sample matter? There are two reasons. One is that the hydrometer itself may change its density as a function of temperature, and thus give incorrect readings at any temperature except that for which it is specifically designed (i.e., it floats higher or lower as its density changes). Unfortunately, unless you have a table for your specific hydrometer (which is rarely supplied), this effect cannot be corrected by a table because of the different materials of construction of hydrometers. Various types of glass and plastic are used for hydrometers, and each will have it own particular change in density as a function of temperature. It should be noted that this effect is substantially smaller for glass hydrometers than the second effect described below because the change in density of glass with temperature is 8-25 times smaller than the change in density of aqueous fluids. The second reason that the sample temperature is important is that the sample itself will change its density as a function of temperature. For example, the density of seawater (S = 35) changes from 1.028 g/cm3 at 3.98 °C to 1.025 g/cm3 at 20 °C to 1.023 g/cm3 at a typical marine aquarium temperature of 80 °F. Since the density of the sample is changing with temperature, the measured specific gravity will also change, unless this is taken into account.
Again, if you do not know the temperature of standardization, you are out of luck, and a correction using a table is as likely to cause bigger errors, as it is to correct any. Likewise, using a "correction" table that does not specify what it is intended to correct is equally risky. Some marine hobby hydrometers claim to be accurate at all temperatures (68 - 85 °F; these include SeaTest, Deep Six, and eSHa Marinomat). Such a device can be designed, if its change in density as a function of temperature were exactly the same as seawater at all temperatures. Two of these tested below (the SeaTest and the Deep Six) do a fair job of temperature correction, but in fact slightly overcorrect.
Of the three hobby hydrometers examined, all were fairly precise by hobbyist standards. There was no difficulty reproducibly reading any of them to a salinity of ± 0.5 or better (Figure 3). This is not to say, however, that the devices were that accurate.
For the standard type Tropic Marin hydrometer, I got a 77 °F/ 77 °F specific gravity of about 1.0265 ± 0.0003 (Figure 4), which compares well to the expected value of 1.0264.
How to Use a Standard Hydrometer Beyond those issues already described, here are a few tips in using a hydrometer:
How to Use a Swing Arm Hydrometer In addition to those described above, here are some special tips for swing arm hydrometers:
If nothing more, I hope this article alerts aquarists to some of the issues behind the use of hydrometers and specific gravity for measuring salinity. For those interested in additional discussion of hydrometers and how they relate to specific gravity and salinity, there is a nice discussion in Stephen Spottes "Captive Seawater Fishes", along with a chart for correcting 60 °F/60 °F specific gravity measurements made at other temperatures. |