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1.
The retention of dissolved organic matter in soils is mainly attributed to interactions with the clay fraction. Yet, it is unclear to which extent certain clay‐sized soil constituents contribute to the sorption of dissolved organic matter. In order to identify the mineral constituents controlling the sorption of dissolved organic matter, we carried out experiments on bulk samples and differently pretreated clay‐size separates (untreated, organic matter oxidation with H2O2, and organic matter oxidation with H2O2 + extraction of Al and Fe oxides) from subsoil horizons of four Inceptisols and one Alfisol. The untreated clay separates of the subsoils sorbed 85 to 95% of the dissolved organic matter the whole soil sorbed. The sorption of the clay fraction increased when indigenous organic matter was oxidized by H2O2. Subsequent extraction of Al and Fe oxides/hydroxides caused a sharp decrease of the sorption of dissolved organic matter. This indicated that these oxides/hydroxides in the clay fraction were the main sorbents of dissolved organic matter of the investigated soils. Moreover, the coverage of these sorbents with organic matter reduced the amount of binding sites available for further sorption. The non‐expandable layer silicates, which dominated the investigated clay fractions, exhibited a weak sorption of dissolved organic matter. Whole soils and untreated clay fractions favored the sorption of ”︁hydrophobic” dissolved organic matter. The removal of oxides/hydroxides reduced the sorption of the lignin‐derived ”︁hydrophobic” dissolved organic matter onto the remaining layer silicates stronger than that of ”︁hydrophilic” dissolved organic matter.  相似文献   

2.
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is often considered the most labile portion of organic matter in soil and to be negligible with respect to the accumulation of soil C. In this short review, we present recent evidence that this view is invalid. The stability of DOM from forest floor horizons, peats, and topsoils against microbial degradation increases with advanced decomposition of the parent organic matter (OM). Aromatic compounds, deriving from lignin, likely are the most stable components of DOM while plant‐derived carbohydrates seem easily degradable. Carbohydrates and N‐rich compounds of microbial origin produced during the degradation of DOM can be relatively stable. Such components contribute much to DOM in the mineral subsoil. Sorption of DOM to soil minerals and (co‐)precipitation with Al (and probably also with Fe), especially of the inherently stable aromatic moieties, result in distinct stabilization. In laboratory incubation experiments, the mean residence time of DOM from the Oa horizon of a Haplic Podzol increased from <30 y in solution to >90 y after sorption to a subsoil. We combined DOM fluxes and mineralization rate constants for DOM sorbed to minerals and a subsoil horizon, and (co‐)precipitated with Al to estimate the potential contribution of DOM to total C in the mineral soil of a Haplic Podzol in Germany. The contribution of roots to DOM was not considered because of lack of data. The DOM‐derived soil C ranges from 20 to 55 Mg ha–1 in the mineral soil, which represents 19%–50% of the total soil C. The variation of the estimate reflects the variation in mineralization rate constants obtained for sorbed and (co‐)precipitated DOM. Nevertheless, the estimates indicate that DOM contributes significantly to the accumulation of stable OM in soil. A more precise estimation of DOM‐derived C in soils requires mineralization rate constants for DOM sorbed to all relevant minerals or (co‐)precipitated with Fe. Additionally, we need information on the contribution of sorption to distinct minerals as well as of (co‐)precipitation with Al and Fe to DOM retention.  相似文献   

3.
连续九年施用有机肥料,紫色水稻土壤及<0.002mm的有机无机复合体中无定形铁,铝和铬合态铁,铝的含量呈不同程度的增加,铬合态铁和铝间具拮抗作用(r=0.7998n=7);土壤的有机质含量增加主要是由于轻组有机质含量增加,而有机无机复合度下降,土壤重组腐殖质的含量为0.25-0.01mm><0.002mm>1-0.25mm>0.01-0.002mm;有机无机复合度及重组腐殖质中松结态与紧结态的比值  相似文献   

4.
The 14C age of soil organic matter is known to increase with soil depth. Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine the stabilization of carbon compounds in the entire soil profile using particle size fractionation to distinguish SOM pools with different turnover rates. Samples were taken from a Dystric Cambisol and a Haplic Podzol under forest, which are representative soil types under humid climate conditions. The conceptual approach included the analyses of particle size fractions of all mineral soil horizons for elemental composition and chemical structure of the organic matter by 13C cross-polarization magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (CPMAS NMR) spectroscopy. The contribution of phenols and hydroxyalkanoic acids, which represent recalcitrant plant litter compounds, was analyzed after CuO oxidation.In the Dystric Cambisol, the highest carbon concentration as well as the highest percentage of total organic carbon are found in the <6.3 μm fractions of the B and C horizons. In the Haplic Podzol, carbon distribution among the particle size fractions of the Bh and Bvs horizons is influenced by the adsorption of dissolved organic matter. A relationship between the carbon enrichment in fractions <6.3 μm and the 14C activity of the bulk soil indicates that stabilization of SOM occurs in fine particle size fractions of both soils. 13C CPMAS NMR spectroscopy shows that a high concentration of alkyl carbon is present in the fine particle size fractions of the B horizons of the Dystric Cambisol. Decreasing contribution of O-alkyl and aromatic carbon with particle size as well as soil depth indicates that these compounds are not stabilized in the Dystric Cambisol. These results are in accordance with data obtained by wet chemical analyses showing that cutin/suberin-derived hydroxyalkanoic acids are preserved in the fine particle size fractions of the B horizons. The organic matter composition in particle size fractions of the top- and subsoil horizons of the Haplic Podzol shows that this soil is acting like a chromatographic system preserving insoluble alkyl carbon in the fine particle size fractions of the A horizon. Small molecules, most probably organic acids, dominate in the fine particle size fractions of the C horizons, where they are stabilized in clay-sized fractions most likely due to the interaction with the mineral phase. The characterization of lignin-derived phenols indicated, in accordance with the NMR measurements, that these compounds are not stabilized in the mineral soil horizons.  相似文献   

5.
Soil minerals are known to influence the biological stability of soil organic matter (SOM). Our study aimed to relate properties of the mineral matrix to its ability to protect organic C against decomposition in acid soils. We used the amount of hydroxyl ions released after exposure to NaF solution to establish a reactivity gradient spanning 12 subsoil horizons collected from 10 different locations. The subsoil horizons represent six soil orders and diverse geological parent materials. Phyllosilicates were characterized by X-ray diffraction and pedogenic oxides by selective dissolution procedures. The organic carbon (C) remaining after chemical removal of an oxidizable fraction of SOM with NaOCl solution was taken to represent a stable organic carbon pool. Stable organic carbon was confirmed as older than bulk organic carbon by a smaller radiocarbon (14C) content after oxidation in all 12 soils. The amount of stable organic C did not depend on clay content or the content of dithionite–citrate-extractable Fe. The combination of oxalate-extractable Fe and Al explained the greatest amount of variation in stable organic C (R2 = 0.78). Our results suggest that in acid soils, organic matter is preferentially protected by interaction with poorly crystalline minerals represented by the oxalate-soluble Fe and Al fraction. This evidence suggests that ligand exchange between mineral surface hydroxyl groups and negatively charged organic functional groups is a quantitatively important mechanism in the stabilization of SOM in acid soils. The results imply a finite stabilization capacity of soil minerals for organic matter, limited by the area density of reactive surface sites.  相似文献   

6.
A reassessment of podzol formation processes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Translocated (oxalate-soluble) Al and Fe are present predominantly in inorganic forms in the B2 horizons of the five pcdzol profiles examined: A1 as imogolite and proto-imogolite allophanes, and Fe as a separate oxide phase. Below the top few cm of the B2 horizon, over 75 per cent of the extractable (acid-plus alkali-soluble) organic matter is present as Al-fulvates, largely sorbed on allophanic material. The Bh horizons of the Iron Humus Podzol and Iron Podzol intergrades are distinguished by very high levels of organically bound Fe (soluble in EDTA solution), five to ten times more than in immediately adjacent A2 or B2 horizons, and also by larger humic acid contents than in comparable B2, levels in typical Iron Podzols. Inorganic forms of translocated Al and Fe are probably absent from two of the three Bh horizons examined, and also from the Bhg horizon overlying the thin iron pan in the Peaty Podzol. The organic matter in this Bhg horizon is saturated with Al rather than Fe. Chemical and physical processes which could lead to evolution of a profile along the genetic sequence, Iron Podzol, Iron Humus Podzol, Peaty Podzol, are postulated. During the formation of an Iron Podzol, positively charged inorganic sols carry aluminium, silicon and iron from the A2 and deposit them in the B2 horizon; subsequently, with the development of an H layer, colloidal humus migrates through the A2 and precipitates on the positive colloids at the top of the B2 horizon to form a Bh horizon, in which remobilized ferric species are trapped by the organic matter. In higher rainfall areas, occasional waterlogging above the oxide-impregnated B2 leads to a thin iron pan, separating permanently oxidizing conditions below from seasonally waterlogged and reducing conditions above.  相似文献   

7.
What processes control the accumulation and storage of carbon (C) in the mineral subsoil beneath peat? To find out we investigated four podzolic mineral subsoil profiles from forest and beneath peat in Lakkasuo mire in central boreal Finland. The amount of C in the mineral subsoil ranged from 3.9 to 8.1 kg m?2 over a thickness of 70 cm and that in the organic horizons ranged from 1.8 to 144 kg m?2. Rates of increase of subsoil C were initially large (14 g m?2 year?1) as the upland forest soil was paludified, but decreased to < 2 g m?2 year?1 from 150 to 3000 years. The subsoils retained extractable aluminium (Al) but lost iron (Fe) as the surrounding forest podzols were paludified beneath the peat. A stepwise, ordinary least‐squares regression indicated a strong relation (R2 = 0.91) between organic C concentration of 26 podzolic subsoil samples and dithionite–citrate–bicarbonate‐extractable Fe (negative), ammonium oxalate‐extractable Al (positive) and null‐point concentration of dissolved organic C (DOCnp) (positive). We examined the ability of the subsoil samples to sorb dissolved organic C from a solution derived from peat. Null‐point concentration of dissolved C (DOCnp) ranged from 35 to 83 mg l?1, and generally decreased from the upper to the lower parts of the profiles (average E, B and C horizon DOCnp concentrations of 64, 47 and 42 mg l?1). The DOCnp was positively correlated with percentage of soil C and silt and clay content. The concentration of dissolved organic C in pore water in the peat ranged from 12 to 60 mg l?1 (average 33 mg l?1), suggesting that the sorptive capacity of the subsoil horizons for C had been exhausted. We suggest that the increase of C contents in the subsoil beneath mires is related to adsorption of dissolved organic C and slow mineralization under anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

8.
It is well established that certain substrate additions to soils may accelerate or retard the mineralisation of soil organic matter. But up to now, research on these so called ‘priming effects’ was almost exclusively conducted with arable soils and with plant residues or glucose as additives. In this study, the effects of the uniformly 14C-labelled substrates fructose, alanine, oxalic acid and catechol on the mineralisation of soil organic carbon (SOC) from different horizons of two forest soils (Haplic Podzol and Dystric Cambisol) and one arable soil (Haplic Phaeozem) under maize and rye cultivation were investigated in incubation experiments for 26 days. Apart from the controls, all samples received substrate additions of 13.3 μg substrate-C mg−1 Corg. During the incubation, CO2-evolution was measured hourly and the amount of 14CO2 was determined at various time intervals. In almost all soils, priming effects were induced by one or several of the added substrates. The strongest positive priming effects were induced by fructose and alanine and occurred in the Bs horizon of the Haplic Podzol, where SOC mineralisation was nearly doubled. In the other soil samples, these substrates enhanced SOC mineralisation by +10 to +63%. Catechol additions generally reduced SOC mineralisation by −12 to −43% except in the EA horizon of the Haplic Podzol where SOC-borne CO2-evolution increased by +46%. Oxalic acid also induced negative as well as positive priming effects ranging from −24 to +82%. The data indicate that priming effects are ubiquitously occurring in surface and subsoil horizons of forest soils as well as in arable soils. Although a broad variety of soils was used within this study, relationships between soil properties and priming effects could not be ascertained. Therefore, a prediction on occurrence and magnitude of priming effects based on relatively easily measurable chemical and physical soil properties was not possible. Nevertheless, the data suggest that positive priming effects are most pronounced in forest soils that contain SOC of low biodegradability, where the added substrates may act as an important energy source for microbial metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the polysaccharide composition of bulk and mineral-bound (density fractions >2 g cm−3) organic matter in topsoil and subsoil horizons of a Podzol and a Cambisol. Total sugar contents were generally higher in the Cambisol than in the Podzol. For most horizons of both soils, the sugars were enriched in the mineral-bound organic matter fraction. This fraction showed a monosaccharide distribution typical for microbial sugars, whereas in bulk soil horizons higher contributions of plant-derived sugars were observed. A strong relationship with the 14C activity of the dense fraction suggests that microbial-derived polysaccharides are most likely stabilised preferentially by mineral interactions compared to plant-derived polysaccharides.  相似文献   

10.
Minerals with large specific surface areas promote the stabilization of soil organic matter (SOM). We analysed three acidic soils (dystric, skeletic Leptic Cambisol; dystric, laxic Leptic Cambisol; skeletic Leptic Entic Podzol) under Norway spruce (Picea abies) forest with different mineral compositions to determine the effects of soil type on carbon (C) stabilization in soil. The relationship between the amount and chemical composition of soil organic matter (SOM), clay content, oxalate‐extractable Fe and Al (Feo; Alo), and dithionite‐extractable Fe (Fed) before and after treatment with 10% hydrofluoric acid (HF) in topsoil and subsoil horizons was analysed. Radiocarbon age, 13C CPMAS NMR spectra, lignin phenol content and neutral sugar content in the soils before and after HF‐treatment were determined and compared for bulk soil samples and particle size separates. Changes in the chemical composition of SOM after HF‐treatment were small for the A‐horizons. In contrast, for B‐horizons, HF‐soluble (mineral‐associated) and HF‐resistant (non‐mineral‐associated) SOM showed systematic differences in functional C groups. The non‐mineral associated SOM in the B‐horizons was significantly depleted in microbially‐derived sugars, and the contribution of O/N‐alkyl C to total organic C was less after HF‐treatment. The radiocarbon age of the mineral‐associated SOM was younger than that of the HF‐resistant SOM in subsoil horizons with small amounts of oxalate‐extractable Al and Fe. However, in horizons with large amounts of oxalate‐extractable Al and Fe the HF‐soluble SOM was considerably older than the HF‐resistant SOM. In acid subsoils a specific fraction of the organic C pool (O/N‐alkyl C; microbially‐derived sugars) is preferentially stabilized by association with Fe and Al minerals. Stabilization of SOM with the mineral matrix in soils with large amounts of oxalate‐extractable Alo and Feo results in a particularly stable and relatively old C pool, which is potentially stable for thousands of years.  相似文献   

11.
Interactions with dissolved organic matter (DOM) are generally believed to play a crucial role in the translocation of Al and Fe in acid sandy soils. Binding of Al and Fe to DOM affects their mobility in soils by altering sorption equilibria of charged sites on solid soil material, inducing precipitation of organo‐metallic complexes and preventing the formation of inorganic Al and Fe phases. The relative importance of the different processes, especially with respect to the translocation of Al, Fe and organic matter in podzols, remains unresolved. We determined the effect of the presence of solid soil material from the eluvial (AhE and AE, respectively) horizons of a Fimic Anthrosol and a Haplic Podzol on the metal‐to‐organic carbon (M/C) ratio in solution and the formation of dissolved organic Al and Fe complexes. Furthermore, we assessed the resulting influence on the mobilization of Al, Fe and DOM. Even under considerable metal loading, the M/C ratios and ‘free’ metal fractions in solution remained low and relatively constant, due to an apparent buffering by the solid phase and the formation of organo‐metal complexes in solution. The M/C ratios remained so low that significant precipitation of organo‐metal complexes due to saturation with metals was not found. The apparent buffering by the solid phase can be explained by a strong release of organic matter from solid soil material and adsorption of non‐complexed Al and Fe on solid organic matter upon metal addition. Adsorption of organo‐metal complexes most likely played only a minor role. The observations confirm the expected mobilization of Al, Fe and DOM in eluvial horizons and seem to indicate that even under fluctuating input of Al, Fe and DOM the soil solution will have a constant composition with respect to M/C ratios and percentage of Al and Fe present in dissolved organo‐metal complexes.  相似文献   

12.
Aqueous Aluminum Species in Acidic Forest Soils - Influence of Water Pathways and Solubility Equilibria In the seepage of three typical Black Forest soils (Haplic Podzol, Dystric Cambisol, Dystric Planosol) the fractions ‘Labile-Monomeric Al’, ‘Stabile-Monomeric Al’ and ‘Acid-soluble Al’ were analyzed. Activities of aqueous Al species and saturation indices (SI) with respect to various Al-bearing minerals were calculated from ‘Labile-Monomeric Al’, using the computer program WATEQF. Al-mobilization/immobilization processes were evaluated by means of AI/CI molar ratios. With 1.5 mg/L in average, the Altotal concentrations are relatively low in all studied soils. In the O-horizon leachates, 70 to 80% of aqueous Al occur as ‘Stabile-Monomeric’ and ‘Acid-soluble’ forms mainly consisting of organo-complexes. This portion decreases in the mineral soil to 35% in the podzol and the planosol as well as to 10% in the Cambisol. Simultaneously, Al3+ increases to 40% (planosol), 50 (podzol), and 70% (cambisol). In all horizons, 5 to 15% of Altotal are covered by Al-fluoride-complexes, whereas Al-sulfate-complexes are insignificant. With 5 to 10% monomeric Al-OH-ions play a role only in the subsoil. Aluminum is strongly mobilized in the upper mineral horizons of all studied soils. In the planosol and the cambisol, Al is immobilized in the subsoil. In the subsoil of the podzol, in contrast, Al reveals further mobilization due to a distinct internal production of HNO3 and H2SO4 as a consequence of mineralization of organic matter. In the podzol, rapid percolation in macropores is crucial for Al dynamics, whereas in the planosol the temporal variation of the perched water table. Leachates from all O-horizons and upper mineral horizons as well as from the planosol subsoil are undersaturated with respect to the solubility of all mineral phases considered. With SI > O imogolite appears to be a permanently stable mineral in the subsoils of both podzol and cambisol. There is evidence for the Al(OH)3 interlayer of Al-chlorites controlling Al dynamics in the subsoil of the podzol. Al(OH)SO4 type minerals are not likely to regulate aqueous Al activities in any of the studied soils.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract

The importance of various soil components on copper (Cu) retention by Spodosois was investigated. Copper sorption and extraction were conducted on samples from the B horizon from six Danish Spodosois. The investigation was conducted on untreated samples, on hydrogen peroxide‐treated samples (to remove organic matter), on oxalate‐treated samples [to remove amorphous to poorly crystalline aluminum (Al) and iron (Fe) oxides], on hydroxylamine‐treated samples [to remove manganese (Mn) oxides]. Subfractions treated with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) were further treated with oxalate and citrate‐bicarbonate‐dithionite (CBD). Sorption of Cu from an initial 10‐6 M solution after 48 hours was determined in the pH range 3 to 7 using 0.1M sodium nitrate (NaNO3) as the background electrolyte. The pH‐dependent sorption curve (sorption edge) was shifted to a higher pH with decreasing Al oxide content in the soils, and for the treated sample after removal of organic matter and Al and Fe oxides. A negligible effect was seen after removal of the Mn oxides because of their low abundance. Extraction of sorbed Cu at pH 4 to 6 with 0.1M nitric acid (HNO3) for 24 hours confirmed the sorption results, in inasmuch as removal of the Al (and Fe) oxides increased Cu extractability. Therefore, it was concluded that in the soils investigated, Cu retention is mainly determined by the oxalate‐extractable Al fraction with a minor contribution due to crystalline Fe oxides.  相似文献   

14.
We tested the hypothesis whether organic matter in subsoils is a large contributor to organic carbon (OC) in terrestrial ecosystems and if survival of organic matter in subsoils is the result of an association with the soil mineral matrix. We approached this by analyzing two forest soil profiles, a Haplic Podzol and a Dystric Cambisol, for the depth distribution of OC, its distribution among density and particle‐size fractions, and the extractability of OC after destruction of the mineral phase by treatment with hydrofluoric acid (HF). The results were related to indicators of the soil mineralogy and the specific surface area. Finally, scanning electron microscopy combined with energy dispersive X‐ray spectroscopy (SEM‐EDX) was used to visualize the location of OC at mineral surfaces and associations with elements of mineral phases. The subsoils (B and C horizons) contained 40—50% of the soil OC including the organic forest floor layers. With increasing depth of soil profiles (1) the radiocarbon ages increased, and (2) increasing portions of OC were either HF‐soluble, or located in the density fraction d >1.6 g cm—3, or in the clay fraction. The proportions of OC in the density fraction d >1.6 g cm—3 were closely correlated to the contents of oxalate and dithionite‐citrate‐bicarbonate‐extractable Fe (r2 = 0.93 and 0.88, P <0.001). SEM‐EDX analyses suggested associations of OC with aluminum whereas silicon‐enriched regions were poor in OC. The specific surface area and the microporosity of the soil mineral matrix after destruction of organic matter were less closely correlated to OC than the extractable iron fractions. This is possibly due to variable surface loadings, depending on different OC inputs with depth. Our results imply that subsoils are important for the storage of OC in terrestrial ecosystems because of intimate association of organic matter with secondary hydrous aluminum and iron phases leading to stabilization against biological degradation.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated the extractability of manganese (Mn) and iron (Fe) oxides from typical Japanese soils (Entisols, Inceptisols, and Andisols) by 0.5?mol?L?1 hydroxylamine hydrochloride (NH2OH-HCl) extraction (pH 1.5; 16?h shaking at 25°C; soil:solution ratio 1:40), referred as to HHmBCR, which is Step 2 (used for the reducible fraction) of the modified BCR (Community Bureau of Reference) sequential extraction procedure. The HHmBCR procedure extracted almost all Mn oxides from the non-Andisol samples, but failed to extract a part of the Mn oxides from some Andisol samples. The procedure extracted most short-range ordered Fe oxides from non-Andisol samples, but it extracted only 7.5% and 13% of the short-range ordered Fe oxides from allophanic and non-allophanic Andisol samples, respectively. This remarkably low extractability of Fe oxides suggests that the HHmBCR method is not suitable for extracting oxide-occluded heavy metals from Andisols. Since the extraction rate of short-range ordered Fe oxides from various soils with the extractant was negatively correlated with the amounts of oxalate- and pyrophosphate-extractable Al even when the variability of the extraction pH was reduced by increasing the soil:solution ratio from 1:40 to 1:500, the extractability of Fe oxides would be negatively affected by the presence of active Al, including allophane/imogolite, amorphous Al, and Al-humus complexes. Because these Al constituents are abundant in Andisols, they would be at least partially responsible for the lower extractability of Fe oxides by HHmBCR from Andisols.  相似文献   

16.
A study was carried out on the adsorption of Co2+, Cu2+, Pb2+, and Zn2+ ions on mixed Fe-Al oxides inthe absence or presence of increasing concentrations of oxalate or tartrate. Mixed Fe-Al oxides were prepared by precipitating at pH 5.5 mixtures of Fe and Al ions at initial Fe/Al molar ratios (R) of 0, 1, 2, 4, 10 and ∞ (R0, R1, R2, R4, R10 and R∞).The oxides aged 7 days at 20 °C or 30 days at 50 °C showed different chemical composition and physico-chemical and mineralogical properties. All the mixed Fe-Al oxides showed presence of poorly crystalline materials (ferrihydrite) even after prolonged aging. The heavy metals wereselectively adsorbed on the oxides. For all the precipitates aged7 days at 20 °C, the selectivity sequence wasPb2+> Cu2+ > Zn2+ > Co2+, but the pH at which 50% ofeach cation was adsorbed (pH50) was different from sample tosample. It was found that usually the greater the amounts of Fe in Fe-Al gels the lower the pH50 for each metal, but the adsorption of a heavy metal was not linearly related to Fe content. The pH50 usually did not change significantly when the oxides were aged 30 days at 50 °C. Competitive adsorption of Cu and Zn on ferrihydrite (R∞) showed thatCu strongly prevented Zn adsorption even at an initial Zn/Cu molar ratio of 8, whereas Cu sorption was not inhibited. In thepresence of oxalate (OX) or tartrate (TR) (organic ligand/Pb molar ratio (rL) from 0 to 7) the quantities of Pb adsorbedon the Fe-Al oxides usually increased with increasing rL. The adsorption increase of Pb was particularly high on the oxidesricher in Fe (R4-R∞), but a significant increase was also observed on R0-R2 samples. The adsorption of Pb on the oxides hasbeen influenced not only by the presence and concentration of organic ligands but also by the sequence of addition of Pb and tartrate on the sorbents. It has been ascertained that on each oxide the greater amounts of Pb were adsorbed when tartrate wasadded before Pb and usually according to the following sequence: Tr before Pb > Pb before Tr > Pb + Tr > Pb.  相似文献   

17.
植被刈割对红壤酸度及有机无机复合状况的影响   总被引:10,自引:1,他引:9  
曾希柏  刘更另 《土壤学报》2000,37(2):225-232
在红壤地区自然植被(白茅)条件下,不同的刈割周期对土壤交换性盐基离子组成、土壤有机质、有机无机复合体、腐鱼质组成及铁、铝氧化物含量等均具有较大的影响。从1年刈割一次至6刈割一次处理,虽然土壤酸度的变化无明显规律,但土壤交换性钾、无定形铁、无定形铝、络合态铁的含量及铁活化度值均呈增加趋势,且土壤有机质和复合体的含量相应增高,松结态腐残质/紧结态腐殖质的比值亦增大,即腐残质的活性较强、质量较高,土壤肥  相似文献   

18.
Soil samples were fractionated by sedimentation in water and by flotation in heavy liquids to separate complexed and uncomplexed organic and inorganic components. Flocculation of clays in heavy organic liquids was delayed by addition of a surfactant. Heavy liquids and surfactants sorbed by soil components were removed by washing with acetone-water mixtures.In a sample of a red-brown earth, the organic carbon and nitrogen contents were highest in the finest separates. In samples of a ground-water rendzina and a chernozemic soil, the coarse clay and silt separates had the highest organic carbon and nitrogen contents. Organic matter was concentrated in low density fractions in all separates. Carbon/nitrogen ratios were lowest in the finer and heavier separates. Calcium, and to a lesser extent manganese, iron and phosphorus, were concentrated in low density fractions: thus these elements appear to be associated with organic matter and may be important in organo-mineral complex formation. Carbonates, titanium, iron, silicon and potassium were concentrated at the highest densities.Organic fractions < 2.06 g cm?3 from sand size separates were insoluble in alkali and had wide carbon/nitrogen ratios characteristic of plant debris. The light fractions from fine silt and coarse clay separates were more soluble in alkali but showed high ratios of humic to fulvic materials and high absorption at 280 nm. Such materials were considered to be microbial cell debris and were associated with high contents of disordered aluminium and iron oxides and expanding lattice silicates in 1 to 5 μm aggregates.Heavier fractions, particularly of finer clay separates, contained more fulvic and humic materials of a more aliphatic nature than those in < 2.06 g cm?3 fractions. It is suggested that physical sorption on clay surfaces may be more important in these fractions. Ellite and kaolinite were concentrated in medium density fractions, and contents of some iron oxides and titanium minerals were highest in fractions > 2.06 g cm?3. Such minerals plus quartz and feldspars were associated with minor amounts of organic matter or possibly were not involved in organo-mineral associations.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

The study aims at determining the cobalt retention properties of various soil components. Therefore, cobalt (Co) sorptions and extractions were carried out using an Oxisol sample before (untreated) and after successive removal of organic matter and active manganese (Mn) oxides (H2O2‐treated) and iron (Fe) oxides (H2O2+CBD‐treated). A synthetic goethite was included for comparison. Sorption of the four sorbents was determined over a range of Co concentrations (initially 10‐8 M to 10‐4 M), pH values (3 to 8) and reaction times (2 hours to 504 hours). The Co species sorbed was Co(ll), since oxygen exclusion during sorption had no effect on the amount sorbed. The pH‐dependent sorption curve (sorption edge) was shifted to lower pH at decreasing initial Co concentration and increasing reaction time. The displacements, in particular of the sorption edges corresponding to the lowest initial Co concentrations, to successively higher pH following removal of Mn oxides, organic matter and Fe oxides could be attributed to sorption onto sites of decreasing Co affinity [Mn oxides (and organic matter) > Fe oxides > kaolinite]. Extractions of sorbed Co at pH 5.5–7.5 with 2 M HCI showed that the extractability decreased with increasing sorption time and decreasing initial Co concentration. The untreated and H2O2‐treated soil samples retained sorbed Co at least as firmly as the synthetic goethite, whereas the H2O2+CBD‐treated sample (kaolinite) was clearly less effective. The results emphasized the importance of the soil Mn and Fe oxides for Co retention in soils but also the necessity of taken interior sorption sites into consideration.  相似文献   

20.
In soil carbon dynamics, the role of physicochemical interactions between organic matter and minerals is not well understood nor quantified. This paper examines the interactions between soil organic matter and poorly crystalline aluminosilicates in a volcanic ash soil on La Réunion in the southern tropics. The soil examined is a profile composed of a surface soil (L-Ao-E-Bh) overlying four buried horizons (horizons 2Bw, 3Bw, 4Bw, 5Bw) that have all developed from successive tephra deposits. Non-destructive spectroscopy (XRD, FTIR and NMR of Si and Al) showed that the mineralogical composition varies from one buried horizon to another. Further, we show that buried horizons characterized by large amounts of crystalline minerals (feldspars, gibbsite) have the least capacity to store organic matter and the fastest carbon turnover. In contrast, buried horizons containing much poorly crystalline material (proto-imogolite and proto-imogolite allophane, denoted LP-ITM) store large amounts of organic matter which turns over very slowly. To understand the mechanism of interactions between LP-ITM and organic matter better, we focused on a horizon formed exclusively of LP-ITM. We demonstrate, using Δ14C and δ13C values, that even though LP-ITM is extraordinarily effective at stabilizing organic matter, C linked to LP-ITM is still in dynamic equilibrium with its environment and cycles slowly. Based on Δ14C values, we estimated the residence time of organic C as ∼ 163 000 years for the most stabilized subhorizon, a value that is comparable to that for organic carbon stabilized in Hawaiian volcanic soils. However, this calculation is likely to be biased by the presence of microcharcoal. We characterized the organo-mineral binding between organic matter and LP-ITM by 27Al NMR, and found that the organic matter is not only chelated to LP-ITM, but it may also limit the polymerization of mineral phases to a stage between proto-imogolite and proto-imogolite allophane. Our results demonstrate the important role of poorly crystalline minerals in the storage of organic C, and show that mineral and organic compounds have to be studied simultaneously to understand the dynamics of organic C in the soil.  相似文献   

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