Abstract

The adsorption/desorption of arsenic (As) in agricultural soils is of utmost importance for the evaluation of its kinetic release and potential of entering the food chain by uptake of crops. However, the mobility of As in soils is closely related to the migration behavior of soil phosphorus (P) due to their chemical similarity. Here, the distribution and desorption kinetics of As and P in four different types of farmland soils were simultaneously estimated by cerium oxide-based diffusive gradients in thin films technique (CeO2-DGT) coupled with dynamic model of DGT induced fluxes in soils (DIFS). CeO2-DGT was deployed in the soils over 400 h to investigate the interactions between As and P for their migration behaviors. The accumulated masses of As in the DGT devices showed reverse orders with those of P among the four soils, indicating their competitive adsorption on soil solids. The distribution coefficients (Kdl) for the labile As and P derived from the DIFS model were mutually exclusive. Clay in the soil reduced the pool size of the labile As by increasing the irreversible adsorption of As on soil particles. The adsorption rate constants of As were much smaller than P but their desorption rate constants were comparable. Among the four soils, the soil with the highest soil labile As/P molar ratio measured by DGT showed the largest potential of As phytotoxicity. Both As and P could reach the equilibrium of resupply within 0.7– 18 min under DGT depletion, and significant negative correlation was observed between the desorption rate (kb) of As and clay content in the soils.

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