Determination of carbon-bonded sulfur in soils by hydriodic acid reduction and hydrogen peroxide oxidation
Author(s) -
Xiao-quan Shan,
Bin Chen
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
fresenius journal of analytical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1130
pISSN - 0937-0633
DOI - 10.1007/bf00323633
Subject(s) - sulfur , chemistry , hydrogen peroxide , inorganic chemistry , carbon fibers , nitric acid , residue (chemistry) , environmental chemistry , organic chemistry , materials science , composite number , composite material
A sequential extraction method has been developed for the determination of carbon-bonded sulfur in soils. The soil sample has been sequentially reduced with HI and oxidized with hydrogen peroxide, and finally the residue has been digested with a mixture of nitric acid and perchloric acid. All inorganic sulfur components and ester sulfur has been reduced to H2S by HI except the unreducible sulfur including pyritic sulfur, carbon-bonded sulfur and a previously unidentified sulfur fraction. Whereas a part of the carbon-bonded sulfur has been dissolved in the HI reducing solution another part of carbon-bonded sulfur was removed by hydrogen peroxide oxidation. The total carbon-bonded sulfur compose for oxic soils of the HI-dissolved sulfur and the H2O2-oxidized sulfur. However, because the pyritic sulfur can be completely decomposed by H2O2, this form of sulfur should be subtracted from the sum of the two sulfur fractions in case of anoxic soils. Unidentified sulfur components were also detected in the residue after the sequential extraction.
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