Abstract
Understanding the interactions of humic acids and clay minerals is important for modeling the geochemical fate and transport of nutrients and pollutants in soil and natural waters upon changes of environmental parameters such as ionic strength and pH. This paper describes the adsorption/precipitation properties of a sedimentary humic acid under different conditions of pH and ionic strength in presence of the clay mineral vermiculite. The clay suspension was prepared to have a distribution of grain size composed mainly of particles <63 μm, which is believed to play a major role on transport and fate of adsorbed materials in aquatic environments. The pHs studied were 5.0, 6.0 and 7.0 (±0.1 pH units), in ionic medium of 0.002 and 0.020 mol l−1 KNO3, using initial HA concentrations from 0 to 100 mg l−1. The maximum removal of HA from solution occurred at pH 5.0 in medium of 0.020 mol l−1 KNO3. This removal is mostly due to precipitation, which occurred at similar rates in both ionic strength, so that the additional HA removal at higher ionic strength (0.020 mol l−1 KNO3) was attributed to adsorption. Adsorption processes intensified at higher ionic strength suggest the occurrence of chemical interactions between the interfaces since under these conditions the electrostatic interactions are minimized. A similar effect was observed at pH 6.0, but in this case adsorption prevailed as the removal mechanism in medium of 0.020 mol l−1 KNO3. At pH 7, adsorption is the predominant process removing HA from solution, with increase of adsorption upon decreasing the ionic strength, suggesting that electrostatic attractions play the major role in the adsorption mechanism under these conditions. Comparison of the results obtained using a re-precipitated commercial HA with low N content suggested that the presence of positively charged amine groups increase the adsorption and decrease desorption.
Published Version
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