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Journal ArticleDOI

Iron Oxide Removal from Soils and Clays by a Dithionite-Citrate System Buffered with Sodium Bicarbonate

O. P. Mehra
- 01 Feb 1958 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 1, pp 317-327
TLDR
In this article, the bicarbonate-buffered Na2S2O4-citrate system was used for removing free iron oxides from latosolic soils, and the least destructive of iron silicate clays.
Abstract
The oxidation potential of dithionite (Na2S2O4) increases from 0.37 V to 0.73 V with increase in pH from 6 to 9, because hydroxyl is consumed during oxidation of dithionite. At the same time the amount of iron oxide dissolved in 15 minutes falls off (from 100 percent to less than 1 percent extracted) with increase in pH from 6 to 12 owing to solubility product relationships of iron oxides. An optimum pH for maximum reaction kinetics occurs at approximately pH 7.3. A buffer is needed to hold the pH at the optimum level because 4 moles of OH are used up in reaction with each mole of Na2S2O4 oxidized. Tests show that NaHCO3 effectively serves as a buffer in this application. Crystalline hematite dissolved in amounts of several hundred milligrams in 2 min. Crystalline goethite dissolved more slowly, but dissolved during the two or three 15 min treatments normally given for iron oxide removal from soils and clays. A series of methods for the extraction of iron oxides from soils and clays was tested with soils high in free iron oxides and with nontronite and other iron-bearing clays. It was found that the bicarbonate-buffered Na2S2O4-citrate system was the most effective in removal of free iron oxides from latosolic soils, and the least destructive of iron silicate clays as indicated by least loss in cation exchange capacity after the iron oxide removal treatment. With soils the decrease was very little but with the very susceptible Woody district nontronite, the decrease was about 17 percent as contrasted to 35–80 percent with other methods.

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Citations
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Pedogenic formation of montmorillonite from a 2:1-2:2 intergrade clay mineral

TL;DR: Montmorillonite was found to be the dominant clay mineral in surface horizons of certain soils of the North Carolina Coastal Plain whereas a 2:1-2:2 intergrade clay mineral was dominant in subjacent horizons as discussed by the authors.
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Dissolved inorganic contaminants in a floodplain soil: comparison of in situ soil solutions and laboratory methods.

TL;DR: In this paper, the applicability of laboratory tests for the prediction of soil solution composition and concentrations of inorganic contaminants is still under debate, and two batch-leaching tests differing in their liquid/solid ratios and column experiments (saturated flow, two flow velocities, four flow interruptions ranging from 4-h to 21-days) with a contaminated humic horizon (total contents: As, 196.
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Challenges in modelling dissolved organic matter dynamics in agricultural soil using DAISY

TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of the newly developed dissolved organic matter (DOM) modules implemented in the DAISY model with focus on the quantification of DOM sorption/desorption and microbial-driven DOM turnover was presented.
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From Plinthic Acrisols to Plinthosols and Gleysols: iron and groundwater dynamics in the tertiary sediments of the upper Amazon basin

TL;DR: In this paper, detailed morphological and mineralogical investigations conducted in a representative 25-ha site were combined with hydro-geochemical data to relate the vertical and lateral soil differentiations observed to the hydrogeological history of that part of the basin.
References
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Book

Soil Chemical Analysis

TL;DR: Soil chemical analysis, Soil Chemical Analysis (SCA), this paper, is a technique for soil chemical analysis that is used in the field of Soil Chemistry and Chemical Engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iron Oxide Removal from Soils and Clays1

TL;DR: In this article, a procedure is presented which employs sodium dithionite (Na2S2O4, hyposulfite, or "hydrosulfite") as the reductor, and 0.3 molar citrate with or without Fe-3 specific Versene as the chelating reagent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Removal of free iron oxide from clays