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Original Articles

Retention of cobalt by an oxisol in relation to the content of iron and manganese oxides

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Pages 785-798 | Published online: 11 Nov 2008
 

Abstract

The study aims at determining the cobalt retention properties of various soil components. Therefore, cobalt (Co) sorptions and extractions were carried out using an Oxisol sample before (untreated) and after successive removal of organic matter and active manganese (Mn) oxides (H2O2‐treated) and iron (Fe) oxides (H2O2+CBD‐treated). A synthetic goethite was included for comparison. Sorption of the four sorbents was determined over a range of Co concentrations (initially 10‐8 M to 10‐4 M), pH values (3 to 8) and reaction times (2 hours to 504 hours). The Co species sorbed was Co(ll), since oxygen exclusion during sorption had no effect on the amount sorbed. The pH‐dependent sorption curve (sorption edge) was shifted to lower pH at decreasing initial Co concentration and increasing reaction time. The displacements, in particular of the sorption edges corresponding to the lowest initial Co concentrations, to successively higher pH following removal of Mn oxides, organic matter and Fe oxides could be attributed to sorption onto sites of decreasing Co affinity [Mn oxides (and organic matter) > Fe oxides > kaolinite]. Extractions of sorbed Co at pH 5.5–7.5 with 2 M HCI showed that the extractability decreased with increasing sorption time and decreasing initial Co concentration. The untreated and H2O2‐treated soil samples retained sorbed Co at least as firmly as the synthetic goethite, whereas the H2O2+CBD‐treated sample (kaolinite) was clearly less effective. The results emphasized the importance of the soil Mn and Fe oxides for Co retention in soils but also the necessity of taken interior sorption sites into consideration.

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