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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Three Aqua Regia Digestion Methods for Twenty Florida Soils

TLDR
In this article, three commonly used digestion procedures, hotplate aqua regia, microwave aqua and HF, were compared for digestion of three standard reference materials (SRMs 2704, 2709, and 2711) and 20 Florida soils (three groups of Quartzipsammemts, one group of Alaquods, and one groups of Paleudults).
Abstract
It is important to evaluate different digestion methods to accurately determine elemental concentrations in soils. Three commonly used digestion procedures, hotplate aqua regia, microwave aqua regia, and microwave aqua regia + HF, were compared for digestion of three standard reference materials (SRMs 2704, 2709, and 2711) and 20 Florida soils (three groups of Quartzipsammemts, one group of Alaquods, and one group of Paleudults). Sixteen elements (Al, Ba, Ca, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, P, Zn, As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Se) were analyzed using either an inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometer (ICP-OES) or a graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometer (GFAAS). Precise analysis was achieved for all elements except As (1.0-25%), Cd (1.8-22%), and Se (4.1-22%) in the SRMs using all three procedures, with the microwave aqua regia + HF procedure having slightly better precision (3.7%) averaged across all elements. Compared with the elemental recoveries in SRMs by the microwave aqua regia digestion (80%), microwave aqua regia + HF digestion achieved greater accuracy (94%), whereas the hotplate aqua regia digestion achieved less accuracy (74%). In general, the microwave aqua regia + HF digestion was overall the best procedure for determining concentrations of most metals in SRMs and Florida soils, followed by the microwave aqua regia and the hotplate aqua regia digestion. However, this so-called total-total digestion procedure (microwave aqua regia + HF) may underestimate total Pb concentration in Florida soils and total Al, Ca, Fe, Mg, and Ba concentrations in the Florida Paleudults.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring metals in terrestrial environments within a bioavailability framework and a focus on soil extraction.

TL;DR: The focus of the overview is on empirical methods for extraction of metals from soils as a surrogate for the metal-, species- and soil-type-dependent bioavailable and bioaccessible metal pools in a generalized flow chart for monitoring of metals in soils.
Journal Article

Impact of heavy metal contamination of Bellandur Lake on soil and cultivated vegetation

G T Chandrappa, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
TL;DR: Comparing the results of heavy metals in water, soil and vegetation with their respective natural levels, it is observed that impact of lake water on vegetation was found to be more than the soil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Confident performance of chitosan and pistachio shell biochar on reducing Ni bioavailability in soil and plant plus improved the soil enzymatic activities, antioxidant defense system and nutritional quality of lettuce.

TL;DR: Results suggested that the CN2% treatment performed excellently in terms of reducing Ni concentrations in leaves and roots of lettuce plants along bioavailable Ni in the soil after plant harvest, whereas, application of BR at 2% could remarkably develop aforementioned parameters in lettuce plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential of pistachio shell biochar and dicalcium phosphate combination to reduce Pb speciation in spinach, improved soil enzymatic activities, plant nutritional quality, and antioxidant defense system

TL;DR: Results depicted that the highest reduction in DTPA-extractable Pb and the concentrations of Pb in shoots and roots was achieved in DCP1%+BH1% treatment that was up to 58%, 66%, and 53%, respectively over control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Type II Kerogen Density as a Function of Maturity: Evidence from the Kimmeridge Clay Formation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors purified 26 samples of the Kimmeridge Clay Formation over the full range of maturities pertinent to petroleum generation, and found that most samples comprised >90% amorphous organic matter (AOM).
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, Chemical equilibria in soils, chemical equilibrium in soil, Chemical equilibrium in soils, مرکز فناوری اطلاعات و اشعر رسانی, ک-شاouرزی
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Anion adsorption by goethite and gibbsite

TL;DR: The relationship between adsorption and pH varies with the pKa, of the conjugate acid of the anion, for several adsorbents in presence of an excess of specifically adsorbed anions.
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A critical evaluation of the three-stage BCR sequential extraction procedure to assess the potential mobility and toxicity of heavy metals in industrially-contaminated land

TL;DR: In this article, the pseudototal metal content of the trail pit was determined following a microwave-assisted digestion with aqua regia, which was performed using the BCR three-step sequential extraction procedure.
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Baseline Concentrations of 15 Trace Elements in Florida Surface Soils

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used microwave assisted HNO-sub 3-HCl-HF digestion to establish baseline concentrations for 15 potentially toxic elements (Ag, As, Ba, Be, Cd, Cr, cu, Hg, Ma, Mo, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, and Zn).
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Applications of microwave oven sample dissolution in analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a microwave oven in the presence of acid mixtures dissolves the metals from powdered coal, fly ash, oil shales, rocks, sediments, and biological materials.