A 300*lb mass of a chemical is accidentally spilled into a dam whose volume is 1.362xx10^4*m^3... What is the "ppm" concentration?

1 Answer
Jun 25, 2017

Whoops.....well first we have to have kosher units.......We ASSUME the chemical is homogeneously mixed in the dam, and we finally get a volume of over 10 million litres.........

Explanation:

"1 ppm"=1*mg*L^-1=10^-3*g*L^-1. At "ppm" levels of concentration we don't really have to worry about solution density.

We gots 300*lb of stuff, i.e.

300*lbxx454*g*lb^-1xx10^3*mg*g^-1=1.362xx10^8*mg

And now we can write out the quotient..........

"mass"/"volume"="concentration"=10*mg*L^-1.........

So "volume"="mass"/"concentration"=(1.362xx10^8*mg)/(10*mg*L^-1) and we gets an answer in L, which we then convert to m^3

=1.362xx10^7*L=1.362xx10^4*m^3, not an insignificant volume......

All I have done is to use the unit conversions, and know that "milli"=10^-3.......I agree that it is not wholly straightforward, but practice is the key.