Trace Element Chemistry in Residual‐Treated Soil: Key Concepts and Metal Bioavailability
The Ohio State University · Environmental Protection Agency · +1 more institution
Abstract
Trace element solubility and availability in land-applied residuals is governed by fundamental chemical reactions between metal constituents, soil, and residual components. Iron, aluminum, and manganese oxides; organic matter; and phosphates, carbonates, and sulfides are important sinks for trace elements in soil-residual systems. The pH of the soil-residual system is often the most important chemical property governing trace element sorption, precipitation, solubility, and availability. Trace element phytoavailability in residual-treated soils is often estimated using soil extraction methods. However, spectroscopic studies show that sequential extraction methods may not be accurate in perturbed soil-residual…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 107
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Trace element
- Environmental chemistry
- Soil water
- Residual
- Chemistry
- Sorption
- Trace metal
- Environmental science
- Life in Land