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Chemistry of Water in Soil OxidationReduction Redox Potential

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Title: Chemistry of Water in Soil OxidationReduction Redox Potential


1
Plant Growth
Engineering
Soils in the Environment Wednesday, Nov. 5
2
Soil Attributes and Processes
  • Gases and Water in soil
  • How Acid is Your Soil?
  • An Exploration in the World of the Smallest
    Particles in Soil!
  • Why are Certain Soils More
  • Fertile than Others?

3
Important properties of clay in soils
  • Extremely small
  • lt 2 µm
  • 2. Extremely large surface areas
  • gt 800 m2 /g
  • 3. Negative charge (in our part of the world)
  • 4. Adsorption of water cations

4
Tetrahedron and OctohedronSharing the Oxygens
Oxygen
5
General Properties of 11 type minerals
  • 1 tetrahedral (Si) sheet 1 octahedral (Al) sheet
  • Held by sharing O within a layer
  • Held by hydrogen between layers makes for a
    very strong bond.
  • Fixed structure (does not change size)
  • e.g. Kaolinite

6
11 Mineral
7
Kaolinite in Nature
FYI ONLY
8
Uses of Kaolinite
  • Numerous fillers and coatings in/on papers, for
    making china and various other earthenware items,

9
General Properties of 21 type minerals
  • 2 tetrahedral (Si) sheet
  • 1 octahedral (Al) sheet
  • Held by sharing Oxygen within a layer
  • Between layers held by
  • Water Smectite
  • Mg Vermiculite
  • K Illite

10
21 Mineral
11
Uses for Smectite
  • Oil well drilling, wine, animal litter trays and
    oil and grease absorbents, as carriers for
    insecticides, and for decolorizing of oils and
    fats.

12
Why does this house have cracks?
13
Expanding Minerals
H2O
  • Water molecules are in the interlayer positions
    that swell the structure of the mineral. When
    the water is removed the structure shrinks.

14
Water
No water
15
Construction
  • When constructing a home, the builder must know
    if the soil contains clays that will shrink and
    swell.
  • The mineralogy may be determined through X-Ray
    Diffraction

16
X-Ray Diffraction
17
(No Transcript)
18
If expandable Clays are present
  • The builder must bring in sand fill and raise the
    foundation
  • Excavate to a point where the expandable clays
    are not present
  • Put in deep pilings
  • Move to a more hospitable location

19
Buyer Beware!
  • If the house is not build properly, cracks may
    develop.
  • It may cost thousands of dollars to repair.

20
Soil Attributes and Processes
  • Gases and Water in soil
  • How Acid is Your Soil?
  • An Exploration in the World of the Smallest
    Particles in Soil!
  • Why are Certain Soils More Fertile than Others?

21
Why are certain soils more naturally fertile
than other soils?Its in their chemistry!
Prairie soils (Mollisols) vs Tropical soils
(Oxisols)
(Midwest)
(Hawaii)
22
Charges of Clays
  • Constant (permanent) charges
  • Isomorphous substitution
  • 21 minerals
  • pH-dependent (variable) charges
  • Associated with OH or COOH groups
  • 11 minerals-kaolinite
  • Fe Al oxides
  • humus (organic matter)

23
Isomorphous Substitution
Isomorphous Substitution Substitution of a
cation in mineral by another cation with similar
charge and size without changing the mineral
structure
Si Si Si Si Si Si
Al Al Al Al Al Al Al Al
24
Octahedral substitution
Si Si Si Si Si Si
Si tetrahedra
Al octahedra
Al3 Mg2 Al3 Al3 Mg2 Al3
25
Isomorphous Substitution
Si4 Al3 Si4 Si4 Al3
Si4
Tetrahedral substitution Octahedral
substitution
Al Al Al Al Al Al Al Al
Si Si Si Si Si Si
Al3 Mg2 Al3 Al3 Mg2 Al3
26
How does Isomorphic Substitution work?
  • If Mg2 substitutes for Al3 in the octahedron,
    the anion (negative charge) must be satisfied.
    Other cations satisfy the anion charge. This is
    the permanent charge, part of the CEC.
  • You must keep in mind the sizes (Ionic Radii) of
    the cations being replaced and replacing
    (exchanged).

27
Ionic Radii of Elements in Soil
Ca2 - 0.99 nm
K - 0.133 nm
H2O - .295 nm
Mg2 - 0.066 nm
Al3 - 0.051 nm
Si4 - 0.042 nm
28
An Example
  • If you have Al in the octahedron, then you
    have 6- that must be satisfied by 2 x Al 6.
    Dioctahedron.
  •   All Aluminum protons are giving ½ to the bond.
    Strong chemical bond.
  • Likewise, if Mg is present it is in the form 3
    x Mg 6. Trioctahedron.
  •   All Magnesium protons are giving 1/3 to the
    bond. Weak chemical bond.

Al
Al
Mg
Mg
Mg
29
Dioctahedral vs Trioctahedral
  • Dioctahedral
  • 2 Al3
  • Very strong bond
  • Fits well in the octahedral
  • Trioctahedral
  • 3 Mg2
  • Relatively weak bond
  • Does not fix as well in the octahedral

30
What is Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC)?
  • What is a soil cation?
  • In soil the cations are H, Al3, Ca2, Mg,
    Na, and K.
  • What do we mean by exchange?
  • These cations can replace each other or
    exchange for each other. BUT the charges must
    be satisfied.
  • What do we mean by capacity?
  • Every soil has an ability to hold cations.
    Some soils hold more (high CEC). Some soils hold
    less (low CEC). The units are cmol ()/kg of
    soil.

31
Factors Determining Cation Preference How do
we know which cation will replace which?
  • Concentration
  • Charge (1, 2,3)
  • Size

32
  • How do the cations exchange one for the other?

33
Cation Exchange
  • Types of cations
  • Higher for Lower charges


Solid
Solution
34
Cation Exchange
  • Concentrations of cations
  • Higher for Lower concentrations
  • Equal molar charge ()
  • 2 Al3 or 6 K for 3 Ca2

Solid
Solution
35
Measurement of Cation Exchange Capacity
NH4
Determine NH4 concentrations
  • By measuring the NH4 concentration, we can
    determine how much cations a soil adsorbs

Solution
36
Importance to Plants Scientists
  • CEC can give you a relative idea of plant
    available nutrients.
  • It is better to know the base saturation than
    CEC.
  • Why?

37
Why?
  • Base saturation or base saturation tells you
    the relative amount of good cations for plants.
  • Ca, Mg, K, Na

38
Base Saturation
  • Base saturation is determined by adding the four
    bases. This is called summing the bases.
  • We can divide by the CEC to get the fraction of
    the CEC that is attributed to the bases.
  • Most of the time we determine the BS.

39
Base Saturation Measurement
NH4
Determine the individual bases displaced into
the solution. The amount of Ca, K, Na, and Mg is
the base saturation of the soil
40
Base Saturation Cation Exchange Capacity
  • Base Saturation is a calculation.
  • You add up the amount of Ca, K, Mg, Na, Al, and H
    in the soil. This is called the Cation Exchange
    Capacity (CEC)
  • You add up the amount of Ca, K, Mg, and Na. This
    is called the Sum of Bases.
  • You take the sum of bases and divide by the CEC
    multiple by 100 and you get base saturation.

41
Determining the bases
  • Lab procedure to determine the amount of each
    individual base is very similar to CEC.
  • NH4OAC pH 7
  • Atomic Adsorption Unit (AA) used to determine the
    amount of the individual base
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