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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 57:1222-1228 (1993)
© 1993 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Soil Surface Charge Evaluation by Back-titration: I. Theory and Method Development

Martin Duquette

SNC-Lavalin Environment Inc., 2, Place Felix-Martin, Montreal, QC, H2Z 1Z3, Canada

William Hendershot*

Dep. of Renewable Resources, McGill Univ., Macdonald Campus, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, QC, H9X 3V9, Canada

*Corresponding author.

ABSTRACT

Until recently, surface charge chemistry of soils has been measured using two different approaches: ion adsorption and potentiometric titration. The former provides a good measure of both anion-exchange capacity (AEC) and cation-exchange capacity (CEC) as a function of pH, although the procedure is time consuming. Potentiometric titration is more rapid, but the resulting curve overestimates the change in surface charge with pH. The error is largely due to consumption of H+ and OH by dissolution and hydrolysis reactions with dissolved ions instead of being limited to protonation-deprotonation reactions of surface charge sites. Our objective was to develop the theoretical aspects of the determination of surface charge using a back-titration method. After suspension in Ca(NO3)2, a subsample of the soil is titrated slowly to pH 3, and then back-titrated to pH 8 or 10. A second subsample is similarly titrated to pH 3; the soil and the supernatant solution are separated by centrifugation and filtering; only the supernatant solution is back-titrated. The difference between the two titration curves represents the consumption of OH by surface reactions corrected for dissolution and other solution reactions. The proposed method provides a relatively rapid means of obtaining pH-dependent surface charge using potentiometric titration while giving results comparable to those obtained by ion adsorption.

Received for publication May 1, 1992.


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