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Soil Solution Chemistry of Sewage-Sludge Incinerator Ash and Phosphate Fertilizer Amended Soil
- Source :
- Journal of Environment Quality. 24:279
- Publication Year :
- 1995
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 1995.
-
Abstract
- The chemical composition of the soil solution provides used information on the feasibllity of amending agricultural land with municipal and industrial waste, because the soil solution is the medium for most soil chemical reactions, the mobile phase in soils, and the medium for mineral absorption by plant roots. The soil solutions studied in tits research were from plots in a 4-yr field experiment conducted to evaluate the effects of the trace metals and P in sewage-sludge incinerator ash. Treatments compared ash with equivalent P rates from triple-superphosphate fertilizer and a control receiving no P application. Ash and phosphate fertilizer were applied annually at rates of 35, 70, and 140 kg citrate-soluble P ha -1 . Cognitive ash applications during 4 yr amounted to 3.6, 7.2, and 14.4 Mg ash ha -1 . Soil solutions were obtained by centrifugation-immiscible liquid displacement using a fluorocarbon displacing agent. Following chemical analysis, a chemical speciation model was used to determine possible solubility-controlling minerals for trace metals and P, and correlations between solution composition and plant uptake were analyzed. Ash increased soil solution pH, Cd, and Zn, but bad no significant effect on solution concentrations of other trace metals. Ash increased soil solution P and S, but P increases were less than those from equivalent citrate-soluble P rates of phosphate fertilizer. Soil solution Ba appeared to be in equilibrium with barite (BaSO 4 ). Solubility data did not indicate that any discrete general phases controlled Cd, Zn, Cu, Ni, Pb, or P solubility. Soil solution P concentration was strongly correlated (r=0.92) with P accumulation in sweet corn (Zea mays L.) plants, but solution trace metal concentrations were either weakly correlated (r=0.49 for Zn and 0.36 for Cd) or not significantly correlated (r=0.09 for Ni and -0.25 for Cu) with plant accumulation
- Subjects :
- Environmental Engineering
Chemistry
Phosphorus
Trace element
Soil chemistry
chemistry.chemical_element
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
engineering.material
Pollution
Agronomy
Environmental chemistry
Soil water
engineering
Trace metal
Mineral absorption
Fertilizer
Waste Management and Disposal
Water Science and Technology
Waste disposal
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00472425
- Volume :
- 24
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Environment Quality
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........c359e365605bac916edc2ba8b562ad35
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq1995.00472425002400020010x