Particle density and the plummet balance
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Published:2000
Issue:1
Volume:38
Page:203
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ISSN:1838-675X
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Container-title:Soil Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Soil Res.
Author:
Emerson W. W.,Weissmann D.
Abstract
Soil suspensions are usually characterised by the percentage weights of
particles settling with velocities between defined limits, such as silt and
clay. If percentages were measured sufficiently accurately by both the pipette
method and a plummet balance, dry densities of fractions could be calculated
and hence their composition inferred. The accuracy and precision of the
pipette method were confirmed by the mass balance of particles in peptised
suspensions of a red-brown earth subsoil and a kaolinite. Percentages
indicated by a plummet balance were corrected for the actual densities of
fractions measured separately. Residual differences from the pipette values
showed that the balance was accurate but lacked the precision needed to deduce
densities to 0.01 mg/mm3.
Values of the density of clay fractions were deduced from the means of
published percentages obtained by the two methods where replicate suspensions
were used and also from the mean difference based on a comparison using 199
soil samples. For the latter, an underestimate of clay percentages indicated
by the balance had first to be allowed for. Clay-deduced densities were in the
range 2.80–2.83 mg/mm3, compared with 2.84
mg/mm3 measured on the separated subsoil clay. The
values are similar, probably because the clays are derived from mica. The
density of the separated subsoil silt was 2.64
mg/mm3, less than quartz, because of the presence of
feldspar. Such results indicate the potential use of the method if the
precision of the balance is improved.
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
1 articles.
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