The following calculator is based on a JavaScript implementation
of the Kell equation at
axeleratio.com.
The
Kell equation, employed by the
calculator, is, in
MathML mark-up
[supported by
Firefox and
Safari]:
is the
density of water in
kg/m
3.
is the
temperature in °C.
The
coefficients are
,
,
,
,
,
and
.
A molar mass of
g/mol is used to calculate the
molar volume
corresponding to the density value.
Do it right! Otherwise...
...you will be assisted by an explaining error code
in the density field as a result of
entering an unacceptable temperature value:
E0010:
entered value below applicable temperature range.
E0019:
entered value above applicable temperature range.
E0090:
unacceptable temperature value.
E0111:
unresolved failure during calculation.
Good to know:
Experimental density data for
liquid water at
atmospheric pressure
are mostly available for the
temperature range from 0 °C to
100 °C. But liquid water can exist at 1 atm from about
-40 °C to above 300 °C.
The applicable temperature range for the above calculator is -30 °C
to 150 °C, the range over which Kell provides tabulated,
calculated density values along with other volume properties of water
at 1 atm (Table III in [1]).
The Kell equation has been employed in modeling the density of
aqueous electrolyte solutions [2].
Bibscope-enhanced References
[1] |
Kell, G. S.
Density, Thermal Expansivity, and
Compressibility of Liquid Water from 0° to 150°C:
Correlations and Tables for Atmospheric Pressure and Saturation
Reviewed and Expressed on 1968 Temperature Scale
J. Chem. Eng. Data,
1975,
20 (1),
pp. 97-105.
DOI:
10.1021/je60064a005.
|
[2] |
Laliberté, M. and Cooper, W. E.
Model for Calculating the Density of
Aqueous Electrolyte Solutions
J. Chem. Eng. Data,
2004,
49 (5),
pp. 1141-1151.
DOI:
10.1021/je0498659.
|