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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 43:899-904 (1979)
© 1979 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Ion Chromatographic Determination of Sulfate and Nitrate in Soils1

W. A. Dick and M. A. Tabatabai2

ABSTRACT

A simple and precise ion chromatographic (IC) method for determination of SO42- and NO3- in soils is described. It involves determination of these anions in soil extracts by using a Dionex Model 10 Ion Chromatograph. An aliquot (~=2 ml) of soil extract is injected in the eluent stream (3.0mM NaHCO3 + 1.8mM Na2CO3), and the anions are separated by an analytical column containing Dionex low-capacity anion-exchange resin in the HCO3- form and converted to the corresponding acids by a suppressor column containing a strong acid cation-exchange resin in the H+ form. Conductivity is used as the mode of detection. Results of SO42- and NO3- in soils by the IC method agreed closely with those obtained by the methylene blue and steam-distillation methods, respectively. Tests indicated that S2-, SO32-, S2O32-, S2O52-, S4O62-, SCN-, thiourea, glucose-6-sulfate, and p-nitrophenyl sulfate do not interfere in determination of SO42-. Also, NO2- does not interfere in determination of NO3-. This method gives quantitative recovery of SO4-S and NO3-N added to soils (5–50 µg/g soil). The detection limit is 1 µg SO4-S or NO3-N/g soil (0.2 µg SO4-S or NO3-N/ml of soil extract). With the IC method, SO4-S and NO3-N can be determined simultaneously in about 10 min.


NOTES

1 Journal Paper J-9439 of the Iowa Agriculture & Home Econ. Exp. Stn., Ames, Iowa. Projects 2082 and 2112. Presented before Div. S-2, Soil Sci. Soc. Am. Chicago, Ill., 6 Dec. 1978.

2 Graduate Research Assistant and Professor of Soil Chemistry, respectively, Dept. of Agronomy, lowa State University, Ames, IA 50011.

Received for publication February 26, 1979. Accepted for publication May 7, 1979.




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