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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 49:371-376 (1985)
© 1985 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Mathematical Models for Potassium Release Kinetics in Calcareous Soils1

J. L. Havlin, D. G. Westfall and S. R. Olsen2

ABSTRACT

Potassium release from the coarse (20–50 µm), medium (5–20 µm) and fine silt (2–5 µm), and the coarse (2–0.2 µm) and medium-fine clay (<0.2 µm) fractions of six Great Plain soils was determined by successive extraction with Ca-saturated cation exchange resins. All soils contained primarily montmorillonite-mica minerals. Results indicated that 65 to 80% of the total K released in 7000 h of extraction time occurred in the clay (<2.0 µm) fraction. Four mathematical models (first-order rate, parabolic diffusion, power function, and Elovich) were used to describe cumulative K release. Comparisons of coefficients of determination (r2) and standard errors of the estimate (SE) indicated that the Elovich, power function, and parabolic diffusion equations adequately described cumulative K release, whereas the first-order rate equation did not. Rate constants for the three equations were highly correlated with mica content and relative alfalfa yield and K uptake. In the past, others have used complex equations containing three simultaneous first-order rate terms to describe K release; however, results reported herein show that simple one-term equations can be used.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Dep. of Agronomy, Colorado State Univ. Exp. Stn., Ft. Collins, CO 80523, and published as Scientific Series Paper No. 2877. This research was supported in part by the Potash and Phosphate Institute, Atlanta, GA 30329 and the Colorado Experiment Station.

2 Former Graduate Research Assistant and Professor, Dep. of Agronomy, Colorado State Univ. and Soil Scientist, USDA-ARS, Soil Plant Water Research, Fort Collins, CO 80523, respectively. Senior author is currently Assistant Professor, Soil Science, Univ. of Nebraska, Scottsbluff, NE 69361.

Received for publication October 24, 1984. Accepted for publication November 12, 1984.




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