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  • Socratis Loucaides
    National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
  • Victoire Rerolle
    National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
  • Efstathios Papadimitriou
  • Hilary Kennedy
  • Matthew Mowlem
    National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
  • Andrew G. Dickson
    University of California, San Diego
  • Martha Gledhill
    University of Southampton
  • Eric P. Achtberberg
    University of Southampton
Accurate pH measurements in polar waters and sea ice brines require pH indicator dyes characterized at near-zero and below-zero temperatures and high salinities. We present experimentally determined physical and chemical characteristics of purified meta-Cresol Purple (mCP) pH indicator dye suitable for pH measurements in seawater and conservative seawater-derived brines at salinities (S) between 35 and 100 and temperatures (T) between their freezing point and 298.15 K (25 °C). Within this temperature and salinity range, using purified mCP and a novel thermostated spectrophotometric device, the pH on the total scale (pHT) can be calculated from direct measurements of the absorbance ratio R of the dye in natural samples as
pHT=−log(kT2e2)+log(R−e11−Re3e2)

Based on the mCP characterization in these extended conditions, the temperature and salinity dependence of the molar absorptivity ratios and − log(kT2e2)
of purified mCP is described by the following functions: e1 = −0.004363 + 3.598 × 10−5T, e3/e2 = −0.016224 + 2.42851 × 10−4T + 5.05663 × 10−5(S − 35), and − log(kT2e2) = −319.8369 + 0.688159 S −0.00018374 S2 + (10508.724 − 32.9599 S + 0.059082S2) T−1 + (55.54253 − 0.101639 S) ln T −0.08112151T. This work takes the characterisation of mCP beyond the currently available ranges of 278.15 K ≤ T ≤ 308.15 K and 20 ≤ S ≤ 40 in natural seawater, thereby allowing high quality pHT measurements in polar systems.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2481
JournalScientific Reports
Volume7
Early online date30 May 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 May 2017

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