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calling all chemists



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 22nd 04, 01:12 PM
Stephen Henning
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"Happy'Cam'per" wrote:

Ammonia/Ammonium? = N


Ammonia is NH3

The Ammonium ion is NH4+

Ammonium hydroxide is NH4+ OH-

Nitrogen gas is N2

Ammonia \Am*mo"ni*a\, n. [From sal ammoniac, which was first
obtaining near the temple of Jupiter Ammon, by burning
camel's dung. See {Ammoniac}.] (Chem.)
A gaseous compound of hydrogen and nitrogen, {NH3}, with a
pungent smell and taste: -- often called {volatile alkali},
and {spirits of hartshorn}.

--
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  #2  
Old November 22nd 04, 02:23 PM
Happy'Cam'per
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So N is then Nitrogen?
--
**So long, and thanks for all the fish!**

"Stephen Henning" wrote in message
news
"Happy'Cam'per" wrote:

Ammonia/Ammonium? = N


Ammonia is NH3

The Ammonium ion is NH4+

Ammonium hydroxide is NH4+ OH-

Nitrogen gas is N2

Ammonia \Am*mo"ni*a\, n. [From sal ammoniac, which was first
obtaining near the temple of Jupiter Ammon, by burning
camel's dung. See {Ammoniac}.] (Chem.)
A gaseous compound of hydrogen and nitrogen, {NH3}, with a
pungent smell and taste: -- often called {volatile alkali},
and {spirits of hartshorn}.

--
Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to
Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA
http://home.earthlink.net/~rhodyman



  #3  
Old November 22nd 04, 06:09 PM
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hey... I went all the way thru quantitative analysis and dissociation constants
(twice yet). what I need is Rod Farley or a real chemist... isnt somebody's husband
a chemist on this list? I done all the searches and have come up with the standard
"total nitrogen" thing, now I want it explained in more detail and WHY they use this
way of expressing it when they werent doing that 20 years ago when I took the damn
chem course. Ingrid



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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  #6  
Old November 23rd 04, 04:47 AM
Tom L. La Bron
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Hey gang,

I am not a chemist, but this is an Ag term.

If you would please, could some one forward this to Ingrid, since she has
had me blocked for years now, and we don't speak directly, but the term
NO3-N is a new way designating the relationship of the amounts of nitrogen
applied to fields and the resultant NO3 that remains after the crop has been
harvested. Ag people in numerous states in the heartland have been working
on this for years now, but it is a way of watching and calibrating the the
amounts of N fertilizer needed for the next crop to prevent the buildup of
nitrates and keep them out of the water table amd out of run off.. It is
measured in the 6 inch to one foot levels of the soil all the way to the 3
foot depth of the soil. Nitrates are still measured in ppm, and the N is
measure in pounds/acre. Charts are kept to show the coorelations and show
the amounts needed for a variety of crops.

HTH

Tom L.L.
---------------------------------------------------.
"Killinchy" wrote in message
news:3yyod.313864$%k.20244@pd7tw2no...

"Derek Broughton" wrote in message
...
wrote:

a chemist on this list? I done all the searches and have come up with

the
standard "total nitrogen" thing, now I want it explained in more detail
and WHY they use this way of expressing it when they werent doing that

20
years ago when I took the damn


Who's "they"? When I've seen NO3-N, I thought it was just an indicator
of
the Nitrate - Nitrogen pathway, not a molecular notation.
--
derek

================================================== ============
You're right, Derek. NO3-N is new to me




  #7  
Old November 23rd 04, 05:21 AM
Richard Tanzer
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Thanks Tom.

A measurement that combines parts per million with pounds per acre.
Sounds like something an engineer would dream up. It's still not clear
to me how it would relate to the concentration of nitrogen compounds in a
pond.

I'll admit you had me confused when you wrote "this is an Ag term." What
the heck does this have to do with silver (Ag)? Then realized that you
meant AGriculture.

What can I say ... I'm a chemist.

Rich


"Tom L. La Bron" wrote in
:

Hey gang,

I am not a chemist, but this is an Ag term.

If you would please, could some one forward this to Ingrid, since she
has had me blocked for years now, and we don't speak directly, but the
term NO3-N is a new way designating the relationship of the amounts of
nitrogen applied to fields and the resultant NO3 that remains after
the crop has been harvested. Ag people in numerous states in the
heartland have been working on this for years now, but it is a way of
watching and calibrating the the amounts of N fertilizer needed for
the next crop to prevent the buildup of nitrates and keep them out of
the water table amd out of run off.. It is measured in the 6 inch to
one foot levels of the soil all the way to the 3 foot depth of the
soil. Nitrates are still measured in ppm, and the N is measure in
pounds/acre. Charts are kept to show the coorelations and show the
amounts needed for a variety of crops.

HTH

Tom L.L.

  #8  
Old November 23rd 04, 03:50 AM
Richard Tanzer
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I'm a chemist. I agree with most of the comments in this thread.

Nitrogen, as found in the air is Nsub2. The "sub" indicates subscript.
Nsub2 has little biological activity, but certain bacteria and other
organisms can "fix" nitrogen from the air and incorporate it into
biochemicals.

Ammonia is NHsub3. When ammonia is dissolved in water it is sometimes
called ammonium hydroxide or NHsub4OH. Ammonium hydroxide is a weak base.
It partially breaks down, or disassociates into the ammonium ion NHsub4sup+
and hydroxyl ions OHsup-. The "sup" indicates superscript. In addition to
other toxicity problems associated with ammonia, it is basic and will raise
the pH, i.e. increase the alkalinity of the water.

Nitrous acid is HNOsub2. Nitrous acid is a strong acid, in water it
completely breaks down into Hsub3Osup+ (hydronium ions) plus NOsub2sup+
(nitrite ion). The nitrite ion oxidizes quickly in well-oxygenated water
to become NOsub3sup+ (nitrate).

Unfortunately, none of this explains "what exactly is the difference
between NO3-N and just plain NO3." The terminology is simply not clear.

Richard

P.S. - I don't have a husband, but I do have an excellent wife.



Derek Broughton wrote in
:

wrote:

a chemist on this list? I done all the searches and have come up
with the standard "total nitrogen" thing, now I want it explained in
more detail and WHY they use this way of expressing it when they
werent doing that 20 years ago when I took the damn


Who's "they"? When I've seen NO3-N, I thought it was just an
indicator of the Nitrate - Nitrogen pathway, not a molecular
notation.


  #9  
Old November 23rd 04, 06:06 PM
Cuvapu
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wrote in
:

hey... I went all the way thru quantitative analysis and dissociation
constants (twice yet). what I need is Rod Farley or a real chemist...
isnt somebody's husband a chemist on this list? I done all the
searches and have come up with the standard "total nitrogen" thing,
now I want it explained in more detail and WHY they use this way of
expressing it when they werent doing that 20 years ago when I took the
damn chem course. Ingrid



NO3-N is a term used by environmental chemists as well as (as someone has
already said) in agriculture. It's not new - it was certainly in common
use in the '70's when I was involved in drinking water quality and I'm
pretty sure it dates back to the start of the 20th century or before.

It is used because there can be several different nitrogen compounds (eg
ammonia, nitrite, nitrate or albumoid compounds) which have diffrent
proportions of nitrogen in them. Often it is OK just to express the
concentration of that compound in the usual way - eg mg NH3 per litre, or
mg NO3 per litre. But they contain very different amounts of nitrogen. So
whereas 1 mg NO3 contains only about 0.2 mg nitrogen, 1 mg NH3 contains
0.8 mg nitrogen.

So when the amount of nitrogen is more important than the amount of the
compound it is usual to convert all concentrations to the equivalent
amount of nitrogen. So 1 mg/l NO3-N means 1mg/l of nitrogen which happens
to be in the form of nitrate, and this represents exactly the same amount
of nitrogen as 1 mg/l NH3-N, or alb-N, or NO2-N, etc.

Similarly, if you are spreading it on a field, 1 kilogram NO3-N will
provide the same amount of available nitrogen as 1 kilogram NH3-N.

Hope this helps.

Cuvapu
  #10  
Old November 23rd 04, 11:22 PM
tim chandler
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If you just do a Google on "nitrate nitrogen" you can find lots of info as
to how this all relates with water.

Tim C.

"Cuvapu" wrote in message
...
wrote in
:

hey... I went all the way thru quantitative analysis and dissociation
constants (twice yet). what I need is Rod Farley or a real chemist...
isnt somebody's husband a chemist on this list? I done all the
searches and have come up with the standard "total nitrogen" thing,
now I want it explained in more detail and WHY they use this way of
expressing it when they werent doing that 20 years ago when I took the
damn chem course. Ingrid



NO3-N is a term used by environmental chemists as well as (as someone has
already said) in agriculture. It's not new - it was certainly in common
use in the '70's when I was involved in drinking water quality and I'm
pretty sure it dates back to the start of the 20th century or before.

It is used because there can be several different nitrogen compounds (eg
ammonia, nitrite, nitrate or albumoid compounds) which have diffrent
proportions of nitrogen in them. Often it is OK just to express the
concentration of that compound in the usual way - eg mg NH3 per litre, or
mg NO3 per litre. But they contain very different amounts of nitrogen. So
whereas 1 mg NO3 contains only about 0.2 mg nitrogen, 1 mg NH3 contains
0.8 mg nitrogen.

So when the amount of nitrogen is more important than the amount of the
compound it is usual to convert all concentrations to the equivalent
amount of nitrogen. So 1 mg/l NO3-N means 1mg/l of nitrogen which happens
to be in the form of nitrate, and this represents exactly the same amount
of nitrogen as 1 mg/l NH3-N, or alb-N, or NO2-N, etc.

Similarly, if you are spreading it on a field, 1 kilogram NO3-N will
provide the same amount of available nitrogen as 1 kilogram NH3-N.

Hope this helps.

Cuvapu



 




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