The role of neutral salts in the ion exchange between acid precipitation and soil |
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Authors: | Lambert Wiklander |
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Affiliation: | Department of Soil Science, Royal Agricultural College of Sweden, Uppsala Sweden |
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Abstract: | Theory and experimental results have shown that neutral salts in the precipitation or supplied to the ground by other means reduce the acidification of soils by acid precipitation. This salt effect is caused by the cation exchange occurring after the entry of the rain water into the soil.The acid components of precipitation consist of H2SO4, HNO3 and HCl and of NH4+ after nitrification in the soil. The magnitude of the salt effect depends on the relative bonding energy of H3O+ and of Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+, NH4+ in the soil as well as on the concentrations of H3O+ and the above cations in the precipitation. The salt effect may be considerable in very acid soils. It decreases with rising pH to become very small or negligible in neutral soils, chiefly due to the increasing bonding energy of H3O+ in this direction.The adverse effect of acid precipitation, therefore, is likely to be less in very acid soils, such as podsols, than in slightly acid and neutral soils with low buffering capacity against pH change. Soil texture and calcite content are very important factors in this respect as fine material and calcite increase the buffering. |
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