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Arsenate and arsenite adsorption in relation with chemical properties of alluvial and loess soils
Author(s) -
Shah Rukh,
Saleem Akhtar,
Ayaz Mehmood,
Sayed M. Hassan,
Khalid Saifullah Khan,
S. A. Anwar Naqvi,
Muhammad Imran
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the serbian chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.227
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1820-7421
pISSN - 0352-5139
DOI - 10.2298/jsc170209042r
Subject(s) - arsenate , arsenite , arsenic , loess , adsorption , freundlich equation , soil water , environmental chemistry , chemistry , alluvium , soil science , geology , organic chemistry , geomorphology
Arsenic is one of the most toxic elements in the soil environment. Understanding of the arsenic adsorption chemistry is essential for evolving the extent of soil and groundwater contaminations. This research was conducted to determine the variation in adsorption behaviour of arsenite and arsenate with depth in different lithology soils. We sampled two parent materials at genetic horizons, and within a parent material, we selected two soils. Besides basic soil characterizations, a laboratory batch experiments were carried out to study the adsorption of arsenate and arsenite. Freundlich adsorption approaches were employed to investigate the adsorption of arsenate and arsenite in the soils. Freundlich isotherms fit arsenate and arsenite sorption data well with r2 values of 0.88–0.98 in most soils. Arsenate and arsenite adsorption varied with the soil properties, especially in clay composition and in the oxides of iron and aluminum. Arsenic adsorption parameters also varied with depth in parent materials, and loess derived soils had greater adsorption capacity as compared to alluvial soils in most of the adsorption parameters. This research concludes that the loess soils had higher arsenic adsorption capacity than the alluvial soils

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