Chemistry Homework Solutions
Problem
#10319

Help with a solving a problem and it's implications after solving.

  One of the impacts of fossil fuels is an increase in acid deposition (or acid rain as many people refer to it). The following exercise asks you to calculate how much lime (an alkaline rock, not the tasty green fruit) it would take to increase the pH of a small lake.

Consider a small lake in the Adirondack region of New York state; Lake Whatchamacallit (surface area = 4 mi2, average depth = 42 ft). The pH of Lake Whatchamacallit has been measured to be 4.0 (an unfortunate result of acid deposition), which is just a little too acidic to support aquatic life; i.e. Lake Whatchamacallit is for all intents and purposes, dead.

Farmer Jones, whose property adjoins the lake, knows that when the soil on her farm is too acidic she adds lime (crushed limestone i.e. calcium carbonate, CaCO3) to it in order to increase the pH of the soil and make it suitable for planting. She gathers all of her neighbors for a meeting with the state's department of natural resources. She proposes that they lime the lake in order to increase its pH and then to restock the lake with new fish.

How many tons of lime would have to be added to Lake Whatchamacallit in order to raise the pH from 4.0 to 7.0? Use the following facts to help you determine your answer.

• 1 oz of lime will raise the pH of 5,700 liters of lake-water from 4.0 to 7.0

• the cost of lime is about 5.6 ¢ per pound

• when lime dissolves in water heat is given off, such that when 100g dissolves in water it gives off enough heat to increase the temperature of 3 liters of water by 1 degree C

• 1 mi = 5280 ft; 16 oz = 1 lb; 2000 lb = 1 ton; 1 ft3 lake-water = 28.3 liters

Hint: Start by finding the volume of the lake.

Discuss the implications of your results.

Solution
What is this?
By OTA - Overall OTA Rating
Departed OTA
Purchase Cost Now
$2.19 CAD (was ~$19.95)
Included in Download
  • Plain text response
$2.19 Instant Download
Add to Cart
Why you can trust BrainMass.com
  • Your Information is Secure
  • Best Online Academic Help Service
  • Students find real academic Success
Related Solutions
  • Calculate the mass of calcium carbonate that must be added to the lake water in order to raise its pH to 6.0. - The pH in a lake the size of 4.0 km X 7.0 km and an average depth of 100 m is found to be 4.5. Calculate the mass of calcium carbonate that must be added to the lake water in order to raise its pH to ...
  • Inorganic Thermodynamics - For water, (delta)Hfus = + 6.01 kJ/mol and (delta)Hvap = +40.67 kJ/mol. What is the enthalpy change associated with the deposition of 1.24 mol of water vapor?
  • MASS - What masss of water in grams, produces 729 J when cooled from 58.0 degrees Celcius to 28.0 degrees Celsius? A. 3.00 B. 0.0412 C. 0.172 D. 24.3 E. 5.81
  • Thermodynamics Question - I solved part a of this problem easily. The rest of this problem has me stumped. I already have the solutions to these problems, but it's arriving at these solutions that has made me pull my hair out!
  • Final Temperature of a Solution - Urea, (NH2)2 (CO), is used in the manufacture of resins and glues. When 5.00 g of urea is dissolved in 250.0 mL of water (d=1.00 g/mL) at 30.0°C, 27.6 kJ of heat is absorbed. What is the final tempera ...
Browse