SSSAJ Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published online 11 January 2008
Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 72:56-62 (2008)
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2007.0131
© 2008 Soil Science Society of America
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SOIL CHEMISTRY

Wien Effect Determination of Adsorption Energies between Heavy Metal Ions and Soil Particles

Yu-Jun Wanga, Cheng-Bao Lia, Wei Wangb, Dong-Mei Zhoua, Ren-Kou Xua and Shmulik P. Friedmanc,*

a Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 821, Nanjing 210008, China
b College of Resource and Environ. Science, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing11 210095, China
c Institute of Soil, Water, and Environ. Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization, the Volcani Center, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel

* Corresponding author (vwsfried{at}agri.gov.il).

Gibbs mean free adsorption energies between cations and charged soil particles are a measure of physicochemical interactions between ions and soil particles. The distribution of Gibbs free adsorption energies could not be determined experimentally before the development of Wien effect measurements in dilute soil suspensions. In the present study, energy relationships between heavy metal ions and particles of yellow-brown and black soils (an Alfisol and a Mollisol) were inferred from Wien effect measurements in dilute suspensions, in deionized water, of homoionic soil particles (<2 µm) of the two soils saturated with ions of five heavy metals. The results show that the mean Gibbs free binding energies of the heavy metal ions with yellow-brown and black soil particles diminish in the order Pb2+ > Zn2+ ≥ Cu2+ > Cd2+ > Cr3+, where the range of binding energies for yellow-brown soil (5.39–8.54 kJ mol–1) is less than that for black soil (8.39–9.88 kJ mol–1). The electrical field-dependent mean Gibbs free adsorption energies of these heavy metal ions for yellow-brown and black soils descend in the order Cu2+ > Cd2+ > Pb2+ > Zn2+ > Cr3+ and Cu2+ > Zn2+ > Pb2+ > Cd2+ > Cr3+, respectively. The mean Gibbs free adsorption energies of Cu2+, Zn2+, Cd2+, Pb2+, and Cr3+ at a field strength of 150 kV cm–1, for example, are in the range of 0.5 to 2.1 kJ mol–1 for the two soils.

Abbreviations: EC, electrical conductivity







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