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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 33:86-91 (1969)
© 1969 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Reactions of EDTA Complexes of Fe, Zn, Mn, and Cu with Soils1

W. A. Norvell and W. L. Lindsay2

ABSTRACT

The Fe, Zn, Cu, and Mn complexes and the Na salt of EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) were reacted with suspensions of acid, neutral, and calcareous soils. The initial concentration of chelate was 1 x 10-4M or on a soil weight basis, 11.2, 13.1, 12.7, and 11.0 ppm of Fe, Zn, Cu, and Mn, respectively. Suspensions were aerated and shaken continuously for periods of 2 hours to 30 days. At the termination of each reaction period the pH of the suspensions was measured; following centrifugation, the supernatant solutions were analyzed for Fe, Zn, Cu, Mn, Ca, and Mg by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The concentration of 14C-labeled EDTA was determined by liquid scintillation.

FeEDTA was stable in soil suspensions of pH 5.7 and 6.1, moderately stable at pH 6.75, and unstable at pH 7.3 and 7.85. This behavior was satisfactorily predicted using formation constants to describe equilibria of EDTA with Fe3+, Ca2+, and H+, with the assumption that the Fe3+ concentration was controlled by the solubility of amorphous iron(III) oxides. ZnEDTA and CuEDTA were most stable in suspensions near neutrality. In acid soils Cu and Zn were increasingly displaced by Fe as pH decreased while in calcareous soils these metals were displaced by Ca as pH increased. The loss of Mn from MnEDTA was very rapid in all soils and was essentially complete in less than one day from suspensions of pH 6.1 to 7.85.


NOTES

Contribution from the Department of Agronomy, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins. Published with the approval of the Director of the Colorado Agr. Exp. Sta. as Scientific Series Paper no. 1326. This work was supported in part by the Geigy Agricultural Chem. Div. of Geigy Chemical Corp., Ardsley, N.Y. Presented at a symposium — Metal Chelation in Soils — Div. S-2, Soil Science Society of America, Nov. 8, 1967, in Washington, D.C.

2 Graduate Research Assistant and Professor of Soil Science, respectively, Colorado State University.

Received for publication June 17, 1968. Accepted for publication July 16, 1968.







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Copyright © 1969 by the Soil Science Society of America.