Thermodynamic properties of sea air

Very accurate thermodynamic potential functions are available for fluid water, ice, seawater and humid air covering wide ranges of temperature and pressure conditions. They permit the consistent computation of all equilibrium properties as, for example, required for coupled atmosphere-ocean models o...

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Main Authors: R. Feistel, D. G. Wright, H.-J. Kretzschmar, E. Hagen, S. Herrmann, R. Span
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-02-01
Series:Ocean Science
Online Access:http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/91/2010/os-6-91-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-1001b78604334a32a17d789ce5c471b82020-11-25T01:41:14ZengCopernicus PublicationsOcean Science1812-07841812-07922010-02-016191141Thermodynamic properties of sea airR. FeistelD. G. WrightH.-J. KretzschmarE. HagenS. HerrmannR. SpanVery accurate thermodynamic potential functions are available for fluid water, ice, seawater and humid air covering wide ranges of temperature and pressure conditions. They permit the consistent computation of all equilibrium properties as, for example, required for coupled atmosphere-ocean models or the analysis of observational or experimental data. With the exception of humid air, these potential functions are already formulated as international standards released by the International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam (IAPWS), and have been adopted in 2009 for oceanography by IOC/UNESCO. <br><br> In this paper, we derive a collection of formulas for important quantities expressed in terms of the thermodynamic potentials, valid for typical phase transitions and composite systems of humid air and water/ice/seawater. Particular attention is given to equilibria between seawater and humid air, referred to as "sea air" here. In a related initiative, these formulas will soon be implemented in a source-code library for easy practical use. The library is primarily aimed at oceanographic applications but will be relevant to air-sea interaction and meteorology as well. <br><br> The formulas provided are valid for any consistent set of suitable thermodynamic potential functions. Here we adopt potential functions from previous publications in which they are constructed from theoretical laws and empirical data; they are briefly summarized in the appendix. The formulas make use of the full accuracy of these thermodynamic potentials, without additional approximations or empirical coefficients. They are expressed in the temperature scale ITS-90 and the 2008 Reference-Composition Salinity Scale. http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/91/2010/os-6-91-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Feistel
D. G. Wright
H.-J. Kretzschmar
E. Hagen
S. Herrmann
R. Span
spellingShingle R. Feistel
D. G. Wright
H.-J. Kretzschmar
E. Hagen
S. Herrmann
R. Span
Thermodynamic properties of sea air
Ocean Science
author_facet R. Feistel
D. G. Wright
H.-J. Kretzschmar
E. Hagen
S. Herrmann
R. Span
author_sort R. Feistel
title Thermodynamic properties of sea air
title_short Thermodynamic properties of sea air
title_full Thermodynamic properties of sea air
title_fullStr Thermodynamic properties of sea air
title_full_unstemmed Thermodynamic properties of sea air
title_sort thermodynamic properties of sea air
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Ocean Science
issn 1812-0784
1812-0792
publishDate 2010-02-01
description Very accurate thermodynamic potential functions are available for fluid water, ice, seawater and humid air covering wide ranges of temperature and pressure conditions. They permit the consistent computation of all equilibrium properties as, for example, required for coupled atmosphere-ocean models or the analysis of observational or experimental data. With the exception of humid air, these potential functions are already formulated as international standards released by the International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam (IAPWS), and have been adopted in 2009 for oceanography by IOC/UNESCO. <br><br> In this paper, we derive a collection of formulas for important quantities expressed in terms of the thermodynamic potentials, valid for typical phase transitions and composite systems of humid air and water/ice/seawater. Particular attention is given to equilibria between seawater and humid air, referred to as "sea air" here. In a related initiative, these formulas will soon be implemented in a source-code library for easy practical use. The library is primarily aimed at oceanographic applications but will be relevant to air-sea interaction and meteorology as well. <br><br> The formulas provided are valid for any consistent set of suitable thermodynamic potential functions. Here we adopt potential functions from previous publications in which they are constructed from theoretical laws and empirical data; they are briefly summarized in the appendix. The formulas make use of the full accuracy of these thermodynamic potentials, without additional approximations or empirical coefficients. They are expressed in the temperature scale ITS-90 and the 2008 Reference-Composition Salinity Scale.
url http://www.ocean-sci.net/6/91/2010/os-6-91-2010.pdf
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