Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9490472 Geoderma 2005 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Time effect on the fractionation of Cu, Zn, Pb, and Cd in three typical Chinese soils was investigated. A total of 500 mg kg−1 of Cu, Zn, Pb and 2.5 mg kg−1 of Cd were added to soils as nitrates. Metals in the incubated soils were fractionated termly from 3 h to 8 weeks by the sequential extraction procedure, in which the metal fractions were experimentally defined as exchangeable, carbonate-, Fe-Mn oxide-, organic matter-bound and residual fractions. Results showed that the changes of Cu, Pb and Zn in fraction distribution were biphasic by an initial rapid step followed by a slow one. Metals in exchangeable fraction were increased in the first 3 h, and then decreased, such decreases could be simulated by a diffusion equation and the decrease rate followed the order Pb>Cu>Zn≫Cd. Metals bound to Fe-Mn oxides and organic matter increased consistently in the 8-week incubation. There were almost no changes for the metals in the residual fraction. After 3-h incubation most of Cd added to soils presented in the exchangeable fraction. The content of Cd in each fraction changed slightly in the 8-week incubation. Soil pH played an important role in metal fraction distribution patterns. Jiangxi soil, with low soil pH, tended to keep more metals added in exchangeable fraction and the changes of metals in each fraction were not as remarkable as in other two soils. High organic matter content resulted in the increased organic matter-bound fraction.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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