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Soil solution part 3.

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Presentation on theme: "Soil solution part 3."— Presentation transcript:

1 Soil solution part 3

2 Combined tensiometer- soil solution sampler
Pore water sampler hopmans.lawr.ucdavis.edu/images/research_2_5.jpg

3 Measuring soil solution in laboratory more common, but not as accurate
Displacement techniques With or w/o non-polar displacing chemicals Centrifugation (spinning the soil at a high speed pulls the liquid out of the pores) Saturation paste extracts or any ratio of soil to water mixture

4 Displacement by a non-polar chemical (e.g., CCl4)

5 “Saturated Paste” or Soil:Water mixture Extracts

6 Collecting soil solution

7 Speciation - the distribution of free ions and complexes in their various forms (species)
Free, hydrated ions  complexed or hydrolyzed ions

8 Hydrolysis Metal cations in water accept electrons
“Lewis acid” Water donates unshared electrons “Lewis base” Acidic water is produced M-OH forms an inner-sphere complex Water dissociation upon metal hydrolysis  KH or hydrolysis constant Larger KH means lower pH Al3+ has KH >>> Ca2+ (10-5 >>>10-12)

9 [M(H2O)n]z+ + H2O  [M(H2O)n-1(OH)](z-1)+ + H3O+
Hydration and Hydrolysis of Metal Cations (different forms of ions result from reaction in soln) [M(H2O)n]z+ + H2O        [M(H2O)n-1(OH)](z-1)+ + H3O+ KH =

10 Solution pH affects degree of hydrolysis
[M(H2O)n]z+ + H2O        [M(H2O)n-1(OH)](z-1)+ + H3O+ More H+ in solution drives eqn to the left Less H+ in solution drives eqn to the right

11 Complexation or ion pairs
Hydrated metal + ligand  ion pair Outer-sphere complex Water molecules between the metal and ligand Ligands can be inorganic or organic Analytical methods don’t differentiate between free and complexed ions: Mtotal = Mn+free + Mcomplexed

12 Activity vs concentration
The effective concentration of a substance Measure of deviation from standard T,P and ideal solutions Activity (α) is a correction factor to account for non-ideality and is between 0 and 1 as solution concentration decreases, α  1 Activity = molarity x activity coefficient α = M x γ

13 Ionic Strength Estimate of the interaction between ions in solution
Related to concentration (m) and valence (z) of ions

14 Example of I calculation (monovalent)
0.01 M NaCl I = 0.5[(0.01 M x 12)+(0.01 M x -12)] = 0.5[ ] = 0.5[0.02] I = 0.01 M

15 Example of I calculation (Divalent)
0.01 M CaSO4 ↔ Ca SO42- I = 0.5[(0.01 M x 22)+(0.01 M x -22)] = 0.5[ ] = 0.5[0.08] I = 0.04 M (note effect of valence makes I more than twice as much as the monovalent salt)

16 Example of I calculation (mixed valence single salt)
0.01 M CaCl2 ↔ Ca Cl- I = 0.5[(0.01 M x 22) + 2(0.01 M x -12)] = 0.5[ (0.01)] = 0.5[ ] = 0.5[0.06] I = 0.03 M

17 I calculation (mixed salt solution)
0.01 M CaCl2 and 0.02 M NaNO3 I = 0.5[(0.01 M x 22) + 2(0.01 M x -12) + (0.02 M x 12) + (0.02 M x -12)] = 0.5[ (0.01) ] = 0.5[ ] = 0.5[0.10] I = 0.05 M

18 Activity coefficients
Extended Debye-Hückel eqn for solutions with I < 0.2 M log γ = -AZ2[I0.5 / (1 + BaiI0.5)] (eqn 4.15) I = ionic strength (moles/L) A = ~0.5 at 298K B = ~0.33 at 298K ai = angstroms related to the size of the hydrated ion (not the activity!). It is the “Distance of Closest Approach”


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