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Journal ArticleDOI

The crystallo-chemistry of oxide-humus complexes

14 Jul 2000-Soil Research (CSIRO PUBLISHING)-Vol. 38, Iss: 4, pp 789-806
TL;DR: Theoretical analysis of crystal surface structures revealed the following as mentioned in this paper : Residual charge carried by O or OH on surfaces of goethite, hematite, and gibbsite also contain octahedral sites in which one O/OH position is vacant.
Abstract: Complexation of humic substances with goethite, hematite, gibbsite, and boehmite has been explained from a viewpoint of crystal structure of the minerals. Theoretical analysis of crystal surface structures revealed the following. (i) Residual charge carried by O or OH on surfaces of gibbsite is –1/2; on boehmite it is –3/2 or –1/2; on goethite it is –4/3, –2/3, or –1/3; and on hematite it is –3/2, –1, or –1/2. Cations adsorbed to neutralise these charges can form bridging links with humic acid; higher charges form stronger links. (ii) Surfaces of goethite, hematite, and gibbsite also contain octahedral sites in which one O/OH position is vacant. These may provide centres for the formation of strong coordination bonds. (iii) Such vacant octahedral positions are absent in boehmite. It follows that in gibbsite, cation bridging links would be weak and vacant octahedral sites would be the dominant bonding sites; in goethite and hematite, both cation bridging and surface coordination sites would be present; in boehmite, cation bridging would be the only strong bonding mode. Derivations from crystallochemical analysis are supported by experimental observations. Infrared studies also show strong OH involvement in boehmite complexation in contrast to the weakness of OH involvement in gibbsite complexes.
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Book
01 Jan 1939

14,299 citations

Book
09 Oct 2011
TL;DR: Erratum to: Aminocarboxylic Acids to: Iminodiacetic Acid Derivatives to: Peptides to: Aliphatic Amines to: Protonation Values for other Ligands.
Abstract: Aminocarboxylic Acids.- Iminodiacetic Acid Derivatives.- Peptides.- Anilinecarboxylic Acids.- Pyrrolecarboxylic Acid.- Pyrazlinecarboxylic Acid.- Pyridinecarboxylic Acids.- Aliphatic Amines.- Azoles.- Azines.- Aminophosphonic Acids.- Carboxylic Acids.- Phosphorus Acids.- Phenols.- Carbonyl Ligands.- Alcohols.- Polyethers.- Thioethers.- Thiols.- Phosphines.- Hydroxamic Acids.- Oximes.- Amides.- Inorganic Ligands.- Protonation Values for other Ligands.- Ligands Considered But Not Included.- Erratum to: Aminocarboxylic Acids.- Erratum to: Iminodiacetic Acid Derivatives.- Erratum to: Peptides.- Erratum to: Aliphatic Amines.- Erratum to: Azoles.- Erratum to: Azines.- Erratum to: Carboxylic Acids.- Erratum to: Phosphorus Acids.- Erratum to: Phenols.- Erratum to: Carbonyl Ligands.- Erratum to: Alcohols.- Erratum to: Polyethers.- Erratum to: Thioethers.- Erratum to: Hydroxamic Acids.- Erratum to: Oximes.- Erratum to: Amides.- Erratum to: Inorganic Ligands.- Erratum to: Protonation Values for other Ligands.- Erratum to: Bibliography.

6,389 citations

Book
01 Jan 1974

1,180 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the interaction of humic substances from Esthwaite Water with hydrous iron oxides (α-FeOOH, α-Fe2O3, amorphous Fe-gel) have been examined by measuring adsorption isotherms and by microelectrophoresis.

772 citations