Physical Chemistry
Henry's Law
Gas solubility scales linearly with partial pressure — and that one fact runs from soda to scuba
Henry's law states that the equilibrium concentration of a gas dissolved in a liquid is proportional to its partial pressure above the liquid: c = KH × p. Quadruple the pressure of CO₂ over water and you quadruple the dissolved CO₂. The same equation explains why a soda bottle holds 9 g/L of CO₂ until you open it, why nitrogen comes out of a diver's blood as bubbles on rapid ascent, and why warm rivers drop dead fish first.
- Equationc = KH · p
- DiscoveredWilliam Henry, 1803
- CO₂ KH at 25°C3.4 × 10⁻² mol/(L·atm)
- O₂ KH at 25°C1.3 × 10⁻³ mol/(L·atm)
- N₂ KH at 25°C6.4 × 10⁻⁴ mol/(L·atm)
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How Henry's law works
Pour plain water and let it sit. Atmospheric oxygen dissolves into the surface, nitrogen slightly less, argon and CO₂ in trace amounts. After a few hours the dissolved concentrations stop changing. That equilibrium follows a simple proportionality:
c_gas = K_H · p_gas
cgas is molar concentration of dissolved gas, pgas is its partial pressure above the liquid, KH is Henry's constant — depending on the gas, solvent, and temperature. Double the partial pressure and the dissolved concentration doubles. Microscopically, gas molecules enter the liquid by surface collision and leave by Brownian escape; at equilibrium the rates match.
Henry's constants for common gases in water at 25°C
| Gas | KH (mol/(L·atm)) | Solubility at 1 atm | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Helium | 3.7 × 10⁻⁴ | 0.0015 g/L | Least soluble noble gas |
| Nitrogen | 6.4 × 10⁻⁴ | 0.018 g/L | Diver's bends gas |
| Oxygen | 1.3 × 10⁻³ | 0.042 g/L (~9 mg/L at 0.21 atm) | Aquatic life depends on this |
| Methane | 1.4 × 10⁻³ | 0.022 g/L | Marsh gas in lakes |
| Carbon dioxide | 3.4 × 10⁻² | 1.5 g/L (physical only) | 26× more soluble than O₂ |
| Hydrogen sulphide | 0.10 | 3.4 g/L | Reactive in water |
| Sulphur dioxide | 1.2 | 77 g/L | Hydrolyses to sulphurous acid |
| Ammonia | ~58 | ~990 g/L | Reactive; not purely physical |
The four-decade range reflects whether the gas merely dissolves physically (low KH for O₂, N₂) or also reacts with water (high KH for SO₂, NH₃, HCl, all forming acids or bases on dissolution). Henry's law in its strict form applies only to physical dissolution; reactive cases need extra terms for the consuming equilibria.
Worked example: a Coca-Cola bottle
A sealed 500-mL bottle of Coca-Cola has CO₂ packed in at ~3 atm partial pressure. At room temperature KH(CO₂) = 0.034 mol/(L·atm), so dissolved CO₂ = 0.034 × 3.0 = 0.102 mol/L = 2.24 g of CO₂ in the bottle — about 1.1 L of CO₂ gas at STP packed into half a litre of liquid. Open the bottle and pCO₂ above the liquid drops to atmospheric (only 0.0004 atm). The new equilibrium concentration is just 0.6 mg/L.
The bottle was holding 5,000× more CO₂ than equilibrium with open atmosphere allows. The mismatch drives the fizz: bubbles nucleate on bottle walls, surfactant micelles, and sugar crystals or scratches. The first burst releases seconds' worth of supersaturated gas; the rest creeps out over 24–48 hours, leaving the soda flat at ~0.6 mg/L. A Mentos in cola erupts because the rough surface and gum-arabic coating provide huge nucleation area, turning slow off-gassing into a violent geyser within a second.
Decompression sickness: Henry's law in your veins
Air at sea level is 78% N₂ at 0.78 atm partial pressure. Dissolved N₂ in blood equilibrates to ~14 mg/L. Descend to 30 m: total pressure is 4 atm (1 atmospheric + 3 from water), pN₂ rises to 3.12 atm, and dissolved N₂ quadruples to ~56 mg/L per Henry's law.
If the diver ascends slowly, the lungs offload N₂ as pN₂ falls and tissues equilibrate downward. Ascend too fast and the partial pressure drops faster than tissues can off-gas. Blood becomes supersaturated with N₂, which nucleates as bubbles in joints (the classic bends), spinal cord (paralysis), or pulmonary capillaries (the "chokes," fatal within minutes).
Recreational dive tables limit ascent to 9 m/min and add decompression stops on long deep dives. Trimix divers swap some N₂ for helium — He's lower KH means less gas dissolves and helium off-gases faster.
Why warm rivers kill fish
Henry's constant decreases with rising temperature for almost all gases. O₂ saturation at 0.21 atm partial pressure: 14.6 mg/L at 0°C, 11.3 mg/L at 10°C, 9.1 mg/L at 20°C, 7.5 mg/L at 30°C. Power-plant cooling-water discharge raises river temperature 2–10°C in plumes downstream of outflow — Henry's law dictates that warmer water dissolves less O₂, and combined with the higher metabolic O₂ demand of fish in warmer water, "thermal pollution" suffocates aquatic life. Environmental regulations cap discharge temperature at +5°C above ambient for this exact reason. The same physics drives lake stratification in summer: warm surface water holds less dissolved O₂ than cold deep water, but biological consumption in the depths exceeds resupply, producing anoxic bottom layers that kill anything below the thermocline.
Henry's law vs Raoult's law
| Henry's law | Raoult's law | |
|---|---|---|
| Equation | p = KH · X | p = X · P° |
| Applies to | Dilute solute (X → 0) | Concentrated solvent (X → 1) |
| Slope of vapor curve | Empirical Henry constant | Pure-component vapor pressure |
| Measures | Gas solubility, sparingly soluble species | Vapor pressure of major component |
| Coincide when | KH = P° (ideal solution) | Same condition |
| Practical examples | CO₂ in soda, O₂ in lakes, N₂ in divers | Vapor over salt water, distillation, antifreeze |
The two laws describe opposite ends of the same vapor pressure vs composition curve. For an ideal solution they collapse to a single straight line; for a real solution Henry's law fits the dilute end and Raoult's the concentrated end.
When Henry's law breaks: reactive gases
Plain Henry's law applies to physical dissolution only. When the dissolved gas reacts with solvent or other species, total uptake vastly exceeds Henry's prediction. CO₂ in seawater (pH ~8.1) cascades through CO₂(aq) ⇌ H₂CO₃ ⇌ HCO₃⁻ + H⁺ ⇌ CO₃²⁻ + H⁺; carbonate equilibria capture additional CO₂ as bicarbonate, raising effective uptake ~50×. This is why oceans absorb ~25% of human CO₂ emissions. NH₃ becomes NH₄⁺ at low pH; SO₂ hydrolyses to bisulphite (acid-rain chemistry); HCl ionizes essentially completely. Hemoglobin's sigmoidal O₂ binding carries ~200 mg O₂/L of blood — without it physical Henry's law would limit blood to ~3 mg/L and large animals could not exist.
Variants and refinements
- Multiple unit forms: Henry's constant comes as KH = c/p (mol/(L·atm), used here), as p/c (the reciprocal volatility form), as p/X (mole-fraction form aligned with Raoult), or as a dimensionless gas-phase / liquid-phase ratio. Always check the form before plugging in.
- Setschenow equation (salting out): Adding salts decreases gas solubility because dissolved ions tie up water molecules. Brewers exploit the effect; seawater holds ~20% less O₂ than fresh water at the same temperature.
- Temperature dependence: ln(KH) varies nearly linearly with 1/T (a van 't Hoff-style relation). Slope yields the enthalpy of solution; ΔHsol < 0 for most gases, which is why higher T means lower solubility.
- Pressure corrections: Above ~10 atm the linear relation drifts; activity-based formulations using fugacity replace partial pressure for accurate work in gas-storage and CO₂-sequestration design.
Pitfalls and common mistakes
- Wrong form of KH. Tabulated Henry's constants exist in at least four conventions with reciprocal units. Factor-of-1000 errors from picking the wrong form are common.
- Using total pressure instead of partial pressure. A 4 atm scuba tank of air gives pO₂ = 0.84 atm, not 4 atm. Henry's law uses each gas's own partial pressure.
- Ignoring temperature. KH tables are typically at 25°C. At 5°C the value for O₂ and CO₂ is ~50% larger. Always temperature-correct for environmental work.
- Applying Henry to reactive gases. NH₃, HCl, SO₂, HF dissolve far more than physical Henry predicts. Use combined chemical-physical equilibrium models.
- Forgetting salting-out. Seawater holds ~20% less dissolved O₂ than fresh water at the same T, per the Setschenow equation.
- Confusing supersaturation with equilibrium. Carbonated soda is far above Henry equilibrium; it obeys nucleation kinetics until relaxing to the Henry concentration over hours.
Frequently asked questions
Why does Coca-Cola fizz when you open it?
A sealed soda bottle holds CO₂ at about 2–4 atm of partial pressure above the liquid, dissolving roughly 6–9 g/L of CO₂ at room temperature per Henry's law. Open the bottle and the CO₂ partial pressure above the liquid drops to atmospheric (~0.0004 atm) — a 5,000× decrease. The dissolved CO₂ is now massively supersaturated, and bubbles form on any nucleation site (bottle walls, scratches, sugar crystals) until equilibrium is reached. Most of the lost gas escapes within seconds; the rest leaves over 24 hours, leaving the soda flat.
What causes decompression sickness in divers?
Air contains 78% nitrogen at 0.78 atm partial pressure at the surface. At a depth of 30 m the total pressure is 4 atm, and N₂ partial pressure rises to 3.12 atm — quadrupling the dissolved nitrogen in blood and tissues per Henry's law. Ascend too fast and the dissolved N₂ comes out of solution as bubbles in joints, lungs, and the bloodstream — the bends. Decompression schedules limit ascent rate to give nitrogen time to off-gas through the lungs without forming bubbles.
Why is oxygen dissolved in cold water more abundant?
Henry's constant for O₂ in water increases as temperature decreases. Cold water at 5°C dissolves about 12.7 mg/L of O₂ at atmospheric pressure; warm water at 30°C only 7.5 mg/L. Trout and salmon die when water warms past about 20°C because O₂ falls below their minimum requirement. Industrial cooling towers and warm power-plant discharge create local low-O₂ zones for the same reason.
How does Henry's law connect to Raoult's law?
Both describe vapor pressure above a liquid as a linear function of liquid composition. Raoult's law uses pure-component vapor pressure as the slope (P°), valid for the major component. Henry's law uses an empirical Henry constant KH for the dilute species. The two are limiting cases of the same vapor-liquid equilibrium curve — one at high mole fraction, the other at low mole fraction. Both reduce to identical expressions for an ideal solution where KH equals P°.
What units do people use for Henry's constant?
Multiple — and that's a frequent source of confusion. KH may be (mol/L)/atm (solubility form, used here), atm/(mol/L) (volatility form, the inverse), atm/mol-fraction (Raoult-style), or dimensionless (gas-phase / liquid-phase concentration ratio). Always check what form a tabulated value uses before plugging in. The IUPAC convention favours KH = c/p with units of mol/(L·atm).
Does Henry's law hold for reactive gases?
No — when the dissolved gas reacts with the solvent, total dissolved concentration far exceeds the Henry-law prediction. CO₂ in pure water is mostly physically dissolved (Henry applies), but in seawater or blood plasma, CO₂ + H₂O ⇌ H₂CO₃ ⇌ HCO₃⁻ + H⁺ adds chemical capacity. Effective CO₂ uptake by the ocean is ~50× the physical Henry value because of this carbonate buffering — the basis of ocean carbon-sequestration estimates.