Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Radiochemistry, Department of Chemistry, P.O. Box 55, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
Abstract
Abstract
The sorption of niobium (Nb) was investigated on humus and mineral
soil samples taken from various depths of a four-metre deep forest
soil pit on Olkiluoto Island, southwestern Finland. Mass distribution
coefficients, K
d, were determined in batch sorption
tests. The steady state of Nb sorption was observed in the mineral
soil samples already after one week of equilibration, and sorption
decreased with depth from a very high value of
185000 mL/g at 0.7 m to
54000 mL/g at 3.4 m. The reason
behind this decrease is probably the tenfold reduction in the specific
surface area of the soil at the same depth range. Distribution
coefficients were clearly lower in the humus layer
(1000 mL/g). The K
d values determined in pure
water at a pH range of 4.7–6.5 were at a high level (above
55000 mL/g), but decreased dramatically above
pH 6.5, corresponding to the change in the major Nb species from the
neutral Nb(OH)5 to the low-sorbing anionic Nb(OH)6
− and
Nb(OH)7
2−. However, the K
d values in the model
soil solution were in the slightly alkaline range an order of
magnitude higher than in pure water, which is probably caused by the
formation of calcium niobate surface precipitate or electrostatic
interaction between surface-sorbed calcium and solute Nb. Among nine
soil constituent minerals kaolinite performed best in retaining Nb in
both pure water and model soil solution at pH 8, whereas potassium
feldspar showed the poorest sorption. The K
d value for
kaolinite was above 500000 mL/g in both
solutions, while the respective potassium feldspar values were in the
range of 120–220 mL/g.
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Cited by
9 articles.
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