Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.

Three Oxisols, developed from serpentinite (Sungai Mas Series), basalt (Kuantan Series) and andesite (Segamat Series), selected to represent the most common Oxisols in Malaysia were sampled and studied. The objectives of this study were: (i) to determine mineralogical composition and factors respons...

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Main Authors: Anda, Markus, Jusop, Shamsuddin, Ishak, Che Fauziah, Syed Rastan, Syed Omar
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Elsevier 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/1/Mineralogy%20and%20factors%20controlling%20charge%20development%20of%20three%20Oxisols%20developed%20from%20different%20parent%20materials.pdf
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author Anda, Markus
Jusop, Shamsuddin
Ishak, Che Fauziah
Syed Rastan, Syed Omar
author_facet Anda, Markus
Jusop, Shamsuddin
Ishak, Che Fauziah
Syed Rastan, Syed Omar
author_sort Anda, Markus
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Three Oxisols, developed from serpentinite (Sungai Mas Series), basalt (Kuantan Series) and andesite (Segamat Series), selected to represent the most common Oxisols in Malaysia were sampled and studied. The objectives of this study were: (i) to determine mineralogical composition and factors responsible for changes in point of zero charge (pH0) of the variable charge component of three Oxisols; (ii) to use pH0 values to assess degree of chemical weathering; and (iii) to determine the magnitude of variable charge using corrected back-titration technique. The mineralogical composition was determined by X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD). The pH0 was determined by potentiometric titration in different electrolyte strengths. The magnitude of variable charge generation as a function of soil pH was measured using corrected back-titration to allow elimination of charge overestimation caused by solid dissolution and hydrolysis reactions. The results showed that the mineralogical composition were similar (kaolinite, goethite, hematite and gibbsite) between profiles but different in proportion, except for gibbsite which was absent in the andesite-derived soil. The sequential removal of soil organic matter (SOM), iron oxides and SOM together with iron oxides resulted in the changes of pH0 from 3.9–5.7 to 5.3–6.7, 2.6–3.7 and 3.3–4.5, respectively. These pH0 changes indicate SOM and sesquioxides are masking mineral surfaces and are factors responsible for lowering and increasing pH0 values, respectively. Regression correlation (R2 = 0.87⁎⁎) showed that for every 1% organic C may decrease 1.0 unit of pH0 value. The pH0 values, after SOM removal, are in the order of Sungai Mas ∼ Segamat > Kuantan Series. This suggests that the serpentinite and andesite-derived soils have achieved a relatively similar degree of chemical weathering and they are more weathered than the basalt-derived soil. The charge measured by corrected back-titration is 1.5–3.8 cmolc kg− 1 at pH 4.5 and increases to 4.2–10.8 cmolc kg− 1 at pH 6.5, indicating that the three Oxisols mainly bear variable charge. Charge overestimation resulted from dissolution and hydrolysis reactions during potentiometric titration ranges from 36 to 160%, depending on pH values (the lower the pH the higher is the overestimation). Hence, back-titration is a reliable technique to correct charge overestimation when using the traditional potentiometric titration for highly weathered tropical soils.
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spelling upm-156392015-12-02T03:37:18Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/ Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials. Anda, Markus Jusop, Shamsuddin Ishak, Che Fauziah Syed Rastan, Syed Omar Three Oxisols, developed from serpentinite (Sungai Mas Series), basalt (Kuantan Series) and andesite (Segamat Series), selected to represent the most common Oxisols in Malaysia were sampled and studied. The objectives of this study were: (i) to determine mineralogical composition and factors responsible for changes in point of zero charge (pH0) of the variable charge component of three Oxisols; (ii) to use pH0 values to assess degree of chemical weathering; and (iii) to determine the magnitude of variable charge using corrected back-titration technique. The mineralogical composition was determined by X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD). The pH0 was determined by potentiometric titration in different electrolyte strengths. The magnitude of variable charge generation as a function of soil pH was measured using corrected back-titration to allow elimination of charge overestimation caused by solid dissolution and hydrolysis reactions. The results showed that the mineralogical composition were similar (kaolinite, goethite, hematite and gibbsite) between profiles but different in proportion, except for gibbsite which was absent in the andesite-derived soil. The sequential removal of soil organic matter (SOM), iron oxides and SOM together with iron oxides resulted in the changes of pH0 from 3.9–5.7 to 5.3–6.7, 2.6–3.7 and 3.3–4.5, respectively. These pH0 changes indicate SOM and sesquioxides are masking mineral surfaces and are factors responsible for lowering and increasing pH0 values, respectively. Regression correlation (R2 = 0.87⁎⁎) showed that for every 1% organic C may decrease 1.0 unit of pH0 value. The pH0 values, after SOM removal, are in the order of Sungai Mas ∼ Segamat > Kuantan Series. This suggests that the serpentinite and andesite-derived soils have achieved a relatively similar degree of chemical weathering and they are more weathered than the basalt-derived soil. The charge measured by corrected back-titration is 1.5–3.8 cmolc kg− 1 at pH 4.5 and increases to 4.2–10.8 cmolc kg− 1 at pH 6.5, indicating that the three Oxisols mainly bear variable charge. Charge overestimation resulted from dissolution and hydrolysis reactions during potentiometric titration ranges from 36 to 160%, depending on pH values (the lower the pH the higher is the overestimation). Hence, back-titration is a reliable technique to correct charge overestimation when using the traditional potentiometric titration for highly weathered tropical soils. Elsevier 2008-01 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/1/Mineralogy%20and%20factors%20controlling%20charge%20development%20of%20three%20Oxisols%20developed%20from%20different%20parent%20materials.pdf Anda, Markus and Jusop, Shamsuddin and Ishak, Che Fauziah and Syed Rastan, Syed Omar (2008) Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials. Geoderma, 143 (1-2). pp. 153-167. ISSN 0016-7061 Oxisols - Malaysia. Soil mineralogy - Malaysia. 10.1016/j.geoderma.2007.10.024 English
spellingShingle Oxisols - Malaysia.
Soil mineralogy - Malaysia.
Anda, Markus
Jusop, Shamsuddin
Ishak, Che Fauziah
Syed Rastan, Syed Omar
Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.
title Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.
title_full Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.
title_fullStr Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.
title_full_unstemmed Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.
title_short Mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three Oxisols developed from different parent materials.
title_sort mineralogy and factors controlling charge development of three oxisols developed from different parent materials.
topic Oxisols - Malaysia.
Soil mineralogy - Malaysia.
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15639/1/Mineralogy%20and%20factors%20controlling%20charge%20development%20of%20three%20Oxisols%20developed%20from%20different%20parent%20materials.pdf