Hello all,
I have what I hope is a fairly fundamental question. I have a closed system (a 500ml bottle) containing air and (for simplification) pure water (250ml air, 250ml water). My interest is in determining how much dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC = H2CO3 + HCO3 + CO3) will be formed in the water due to equilibration with CO2(g) in the air. The air was added by a very short exposure to the atmosphere and is therefore identical in all respects to atmospheric air, while the water initially contains no DIC.
I have a very clear understanding of how this works in an open system, because the partial pressure of the CO2(g) is constant at atmospheric levels, which makes things easy. I know that in a closed system, as equilibration proceeds, the CO2(g) is drawn down into the water and the partial pressure of CO2(g) decreases. What I don't know is given that the partial pressure is not constant and thus the Henry's Law equation becomes unwieldy for determining the initial step of CO2(g) <-> CO2(aq) equilibrium, how do you go about determining exactly how much total DIC will be formed in the water.
I've been going through all the chem texts I own from undergrad for a couple days now and still nothing, so any help is greatly appreciated.