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Soil organic matter increases antimonate mobility in soil: An Sb(OH)6 sorption and modelling study
- Source :
- Applied Geochemistry. 104:33-41
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2019.
-
Abstract
- © 2019 Elsevier Ltd The role of organic matter (OM) in antimonate (further denoted as Sb(OH) 6 ) mobility in soil is unclear. The objective of this study was to evaluate Sb(OH) 6 –OM interaction. Antimonate solid:liquid distribution coefficients (K D ) were measured at low Sb concentrations in soil samples with a natural gradient in soil organic carbon (OC) that were collected from different depths of up to 3 m in two excavated soil profiles and in a subset of four soil samples with experimentally increased OM concentration from addition of Suwannee River OM. The K D values were related to soil properties by multiple linear regression and described with the CD–MUSIC model of ferrihydrite. The K D values ranged from 12 to 2800 L kg −1 and decreased strongly with increasing OC concentrations, when normalized to the amount of iron (Fe) and aluminium (Al) in acid oxalate extracts (r = −0.69; p < 0.0001). Experimentally increasing OC by ∼1.5 g kg −1 increased soluble Sb and decreased Sb(OH) 6 K D values by up to a factor of 8. The multiple regression model reveals that sorption of Sb(OH) 6 to Fe and Al hydroxides decreases with increasing pH and increasing dissolved organic carbon concentration. This effect could be explained with geochemical modelling by the competitive and electrostatic effects of adsorbed humic substances on Sb(OH) 6 surface complexation to the reactive surface sites of the Fe and Al hydroxides. Finally, both models could predict the in situ pore water Sb concentrations of unspiked samples, with a RMSE of 0.35 for the regression model and 0.43 for the geochemical model on the log 10 Sb concentrations. For these predictions, the 0.1 M Na 2 HPO 4 –extractable Sb concentration was measured and used to estimate the reversibly sorbed Sb pool. This study shows that increasing soil OM increases Sb(OH) 6 mobility at low soil Sb concentration, likely due to competitive sorption on Fe and Al hydroxides and a process based, geochemical model was calibrated to describe Sb(OH) 6 mobility in soil. ispartof: APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY vol:104 pages:1-45 status: Published online
- Subjects :
- Geochemistry & Geophysics
Antimony
ADSORPTION
SURFACE
Soil test
SHOOTING-RANGE SOILS
010501 environmental sciences
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
01 natural sciences
Oxalate
Competitive sorption
Soil
chemistry.chemical_compound
Ferrihydrite
HUMIC-ACID
Geochemistry and Petrology
CONTAMINATED SOIL
PHOSPHATE
Environmental Chemistry
Geochemical modelling
CLAY-MINERALS
Organic matter
SB(III)
Risk assessment
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
chemistry.chemical_classification
Science & Technology
GOETHITE
Soil organic matter
Sorption
Soil carbon
Pollution
chemistry
Environmental chemistry
Physical Sciences
SB(V)
Antimonate
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 08832927
- Volume :
- 104
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Applied Geochemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d8565e2db657c64fa58534fc638e5160
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeochem.2019.03.012