Proton cycling, buffering, and reaction stoichiometry in natural waters
Publication date
2010
Authors
Hofmann, A.F.
Middelburg, J.J.
Soetaert, K.
Wolf-Gladrow, D.A.
Meysman, F.J.R.
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Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2010
Abstract
Ongoing acidification of the global ocean necessitates a solid understanding of how biogeochemical processes are
driving proton cycling and observed pH changes in natural waters. The standard way of calculating the pH
evolution of an aquatic system is to specify first how biogeochemical processes affect total alkalinity, followed by
the solution of a nonlinear acid-base equilibrium equation system. This approach, however, does not explicitly
reveal how individual biogeochemical processes contribute to the overall proton cycling in the system. Here, we
provide an extension of the classical acid-base theory that explicitly quantifies the proton production/
consumption by a given process, showing that it can be calculated as the proton-cycling sensitivity times the rate
of the biogeochemical process at hand. The proton-cycling sensitivity emerges as a central concept in acid-base
chemistry of natural waters and can be further decomposed as the ratio of a stoichiometric coefficient for the
proton over the buffer factor. The stoichiometric coefficient for the proton expresses how many moles of protons
would be produced per mole of reaction if buffering was absent, and is obtained by bringing the reaction equation
of the process into a specific form: the fractional reaction equation at ambient pH. The buffer factor quantifies how
acid-base systems attenuate the proton production/consumption by biogeochemical processes, and is identified
as the negative of the partial derivative of the total alkalinity with respect to the proton concentration. Applying
this new concept to an acidification scenario for the future surface ocean, we illustrate its potential to analyze
proton cycling in natural waters. Thereby we show that a reduced buffer factor due to anthropogenic carbon input
makes the ocean more vulnerable to any process influencing the pH.
Keywords
pH modeling, buffering, reaction stoichiometry, proton cycling, biogeochemistry, stoichiometric coefficient, ionization fractions, acid-base chemistry