Abstract

A b s t r a c t. Rye plants were grown in a nutrient solution prepared according to Hoagland for 2 weeks at pH 7, next for 14 days at pH 4.5 (without Cu +2 ) and in the presence of 20, 50, or 100 mg dm -3 copper ions. The control plants were grown continuously at pH 7. The physicochemical surface properties of the roots were examined using two adsorbates – polar (water vapour) and non-polar (nitrogen). The surface properties of the roots grown at pH 4.5 without Cu +2 were apparently the same as those of controls. The roots of rye which grew in the presence of Cu +2 were characterized by lower (relative to controls) specific surface area values. Statistically significant differences in the size of the apparent surface area (determined by water vapour) were reported for roots incubated with copper ions at a concentration of 20 and 50 mg dm -3 . The average water vapour adsorption energy of the root surface decreased under the stress conditions. There were no statistically significant differences for the free surface area and characteristic energy of nitrogen adsorption. K e y w o r d s: adsorption energy, water vapour/nitrogen, apparent and free surface area, pH, roots, copper

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