Kinetic characterizing of soil trace metal availability using Soil/EDTA/Chelex mixture
► Soil/EDTA/Chelex system mimics the soil to plant transfer of Cd, Pb and Cu. ► Different kinetic regimes observed for Cd, Pb and Cu transfer from soil to Chelex. ► Contrary to Cd, Pb transfer is kinetically controlled. ► Bulk concentration and kinetics control the Cu transfer. The kinetic aspects a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chemosphere (Oxford) 2011-05, Vol.83 (7), p.997-1004 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | ► Soil/EDTA/Chelex system mimics the soil to plant transfer of Cd, Pb and Cu. ► Different kinetic regimes observed for Cd, Pb and Cu transfer from soil to Chelex. ► Contrary to Cd, Pb transfer is kinetically controlled. ► Bulk concentration and kinetics control the Cu transfer.
The kinetic aspects are not usually tackled when mimicking the soil trace metal mobilization. In this work, a simple procedure is developed for measuring the kinetics of Pb, Cu and Cd transfer from the soil solid phase towards a resin sink. A ternary system of Soil/EDTA/Chelex was employed for mimicking the metal transfer from two agricultural soil samples into the Chelex. Two different kinetic regimes (P
1 and P
2) were observed. The kinetic profile of Pb was distinctly different from those of Cd and Cu. Basing on kinetic principles, two kinetic models were proposed for estimating the apparent rate constants of leaching and removal processes in, respectively, two binary mixtures of soil/EDTA and EDTA extracts/Chelex. Contrary to Pb, solid phase pools of Cd and Cu exchanged with the solution on short time scales. The kinetic rate of desorption occurred in following order: Pb
<
Cu
⩽
Cd. Comparing the kinetics of binary systems, the desorption process was hypothesized to control the metal transfer. The parameters related to the desorption process were extended to the kinetic regimes of Soil/EDTA/Chelex and revealed that the soil to Chelex transfer of Pb is under kinetics control whereas the bulk concentration (affected by the size of particulate reservoir) is likely to control the Cd transfer. Cu presents an intermediate case. |
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ISSN: | 0045-6535 1879-1298 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2011.02.010 |