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VSMOW, or Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water, is an isotopic water standard defined in 1968 by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Despite the misleading phrase "ocean water", VSMOW does not include any salt or other substances usually found in seawater and refers to pure water with a particular composition of isotopes. VSMOW serves as a reference standard for comparing hydrogen and oxygen isotope ratios, mostly in water samples. Very pure, distilled VSMOW water is also used for making high accuracy measurement of water's physical properties and for defining laboratory standards since it is considered to be representative of average ocean water, in effect representing the water content of Earth. Previously, average ocean water and melted snow were used as reference points. These were further refined in the 1960s by the standardized definition of Standard Mean Ocean Water (SMOW). The U.S. National Bureau of Standards (now the NIST) created physical water standards for global use. However, the physical integrity of the U.S. standards soon came into question. VSMOW is a recalibration of the original SMOW definition and was created in 1967 by Harmon Craig and other researchers from Scripps Institution of Oceanography who mixed distilled ocean waters collected from different spots around the globe. VSMOW remains one of the major isotopic water benchmarks in use today.
[edit] Composition of VSMOWThe isotopic composition of VSMOW water is specified as ratios of the molar abundance of the rare isotope in question divided by that of its most common isotope and is expressed as parts per million (ppm). For instance 16O (the most common isotope of oxygen with eight protons and eight neutrons) is roughly 2,632 times more prevalent in sea water than is 17O (with an additional neutron). The isotopic ratios of VSMOW water are defined as follows:
[edit] VSMOW in temperature measurementVery pure, carefully distilled VSMOW water is important in the manufacture of high-accuracy temperature measurement reference standards. Both the Kelvin and Celsius scales are defined by the triple point of water (273.16 K and 0.01 °C respectively). The trouble for high-accuracy measurements is that not all water is the same, so VSMOW water is used as the standard water. This is because water molecules are composed of different isotopes of hydrogen and/or oxygen which evaporate at different temperatures and at different rates. Consequently, snow, river water, and rainwater (all of which are recently evaporated ocean water) tend to be enriched in the lighter isotopes that evaporate faster. Triple point-based temperature reference cells filled with water of improper isotopic composition can cause errors of several hundred microkelvin in the measured triple point. To address this issue, the CIPM (Comité International des Poids et Mesures, also known as the International Committee for Weights and Measures) affirmed in 2005 that for the purposes of delineating the temperature of the triple point of water, the definition of the Kelvin thermodynamic temperature scale would refer to water having an isotopic composition defined as being exactly equal to the nominal specification of VSMOW water.[1] One effect of defining the triple point of VSMOW water as both 0.01 °C and 273.16 K is that neither the melting and boiling point of water under one standard atmosphere (101.325 kPa) remain defining points for the Celsius scale. In 1948, when the 9th General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) in Resolution 3 first considered using the triple point of water as a defining point, the triple point was so close to being 0.01 °C greater than water's known melting point, it was simply defined as exactly 0.01 °C. However, current measurements show that the triple and melting points of VSMOW water are only 0.009911(10) °C apart. Thus, the actual melting point of ice is +0.000089(10) °C. Also, defining water's triple point at 273.16 K defined the magnitude of each 1 °C increment in terms of the absolute thermodynamic temperature scale (referencing absolute zero). Now decoupled from the actual boiling point of water, the value 100 °C is hotter than 0 °C, in absolute terms, by a factor of exactly This boiling–point difference of 16.1 millikelvins between the Celsius scale's original definition and the current one (based on absolute zero and the triple point) has little practical meaning in real life because water's boiling point is extremely sensitive to variations in barometric pressure. For example, an altitude change of only 28 cm (11 in) causes water's boiling point to change by one millikelvin. [edit] Notes
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